From Deseret News archives:
Reviews of Salt Lake Taser use sought
The FBI, which investigates civil-rights cases and complaints of excessive force by police, is also looking into the matter.
Alvin Itula, 35, died Saturday night after a struggle with police in which the officers used pepper spray, a baton and a Taser to subdue him. The NAACP wants to know whether officers used too much force, and the ACLU wants the Salt Lake police department to re-evaluate its policy on using Tasers, which send an electrical shock through a person's body.
Jeanetta Williams, president of the Utah chapter of the NAACP, wants to know whether the police officers used the Taser differently on Itula than they have on other people.
"If they used it with more force, and excessively, on this individual who died, more so than they did with white men, then there is a problem," Williams said Wednesday.
Officers also used pepper spray and a baton during the struggle. After police subdued and handcuffed Itula, he stopped breathing. The officers performed CPR and called for medical help. Itula was transported to a hospital, where he died.
Itula had a history of violence with police. In June 2005 he was arrested and later charged in 3rd District Court with drug possession, possession of drug paraphernalia and interfering with an arrest, according to court records. He received additional charges of assault by a prisoner, interfering with an arrest and drug possession for an incident on May 17, 2005.
The four officers involved in the incident Saturday have been on routine, paid administrative leave pending an internal investigation and an investigation from the Salt Lake District Attorney's Office. A final autopsy report to determine the exact cause of death could take a couple of weeks.
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