Ottawa police are defending the use of a Taser last week to subdue a teenager who was acting strangely in traffic.
Ottawa police were called last Thursday after a 17-year-old was found "acting in a strange manner" on a busy street near his east-end high school, said Staff Sgt. Peter Couillard.
Police incapacitated the teen with a stun gun and took him into custody where he received "the attention that he required" before being released, Couillard said.
"It's a very zero incident to us," he said. "From the police standpoint, it's just an average everyday call."
Couillard added that if Ottawa police issued a news release every time a Taser was used, "we'd be writing them 10 times a day."
When asked if it was necessary to use the stun gun on the teen, Couillard defended the move.
"There's a lot of factors that come into play. You have to be acting in an aggressive manner and from there we figure it out as to what's the best method to take control of the subject in everybody's best interest," he said.
"What he was doing was incorrect, and he was taken into custody with the appropriate manners, and he was provided the attention that he required."
The use of the stun guns has been under growing public scrutiny since the case of Robert Dziekanski, the Polish immigrant who died shortly after being shocked with a Taser and then manhandled by police at the Vancouver airport.
The company that manufactures Tasers stresses the devices have never been directly blamed for a death and it has defended them in several lawsuits.
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