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Showing posts with label dr. shao-hua lu. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dr. shao-hua lu. Show all posts

Thursday, May 21, 2009

Forensic psychiatrist: Dziekanski not suffering from delirium when Tasered

May 21, 2009
By Steve Mertl, Canadian Press

VANCOUVER, B.C. — Robert Dziekanski's mental state, a core issue at an inquiry into his death, got a fresh appraisal Thursday from a forensic psychiatrist who contradicted a colleague's contention the Polish immigrant was delirious when police confronted him.

Dr. Paul Janke, who deals with mentally troubled youth in custody and testifies often in court cases, said there's nothing in the video recording of Dziekanski's final moments to suggest he was anything but a very angry, overly stressed-out traveller.

"He interacts with the people around him, is responsive to his environment, responds to directions and is acting in a way that in my mind rules out delirium but certainly indicates he was in a highly stressed and agitated state," Janke told the Braidwood Commission.

Janke's conclusions directly contradict those of Dr. Lu Shao-Hua, a psychiatrist and expert in delirium hired by homicide investigators who probed Dziekanski's October 2007 death.

After reviewing the amateur video, police and witness statements and medical reports, Lu concluded Dziekanski was in a state of "agitated delirium" before he was shot several times with a Taser stun gun.

Lu's report and inquiry testimony said the cause of Dziekanski's delirium was unknown but suggest things such as alcohol and nicotine withdrawal, dehydration and exhaustion from lack of sleep could have been factors.

Lu said Dziekanski's movements and interactions with people all suggested he was in a delirious state when four RCMP officers arrived to deal with an agitated man shouting and tossing chairs around Vancouver airport's international arrivals area.

All four Mounties justified stunning Dziekanski with a Taser, then kneeling on his back to handcuff him because they said he did not respond to their commands and displayed aggression.

Dziekanski was stunned multiple times and died in handcuffs on the airport floor.

Janke's eight-page review of Lu's report and other evidence criticized Lu's conclusions.

There's simply not enough information in the 10-minute video to arrive at a diagnosis of delirium, he said. It requires a close assessment of the person over an extended period of time.

Hunger, fatigue, anxiety about the journey - Dziekanski had never flown before - and an inability for the unilingual Polish speaker to communicate all could have contributed to the agitation people saw, Janke said.

The medical evidence is also not conclusive about potential causes of delirium and Janke noted in his report the pathologist who conducted Dziekanski's autopsy ruled it out.

Janke noted Dziekanski at one point lifted up a chair as if to throw it but stopped when a bystander yelled "No!"

Dziekanski also recognized police when they arrived but then reacted angrily when they cornered him against a counter.

A Mountie fired his Taser after Dziekanski grabbed a stapler. The officers testified they feared he would hit them with it.

"Given the material available to us, in my opinion diagnosis should be restricted to observations that he was agitated, distressed and anxious and no further conclusions can be drawn from a medial forensic psychiatric perspective," Janke said in his report.

Helen Roberts, a federal lawyer acting for the RCMP, submitted a brief written rebuttal from Lu challenging Janke's conclusions. He said Janke did not grasp the significance of Dziekanski hyperventilating and the level of dehydration an alleged drinker like Dziekanski could experience.

Janke conceded he does not see very many cases of delirium in his practice but defended his conclusion.

Lu employed "circular logic" to arrive at a diagnosis of delirium based on an assumption of severe dehydration, Janke said.

"If we don't assume he's got delirium then we need to address his state, then I stand by my opinion," he said.

Meanwhile, Dziekanski's mother, Zofia Cisowski, has issued a letter thanking retired police psychologist Mike Webster for apologizing for what happened to her son.

Webster criticized the Mounties' handling of Dziekanski when he testified at the inquiry and later wrote to Cisowski to express his regret.

"Nobody so far exposed the truth about RCMP as Dr. Webster did," Cisowski wrote.

"They neither attempted to preserve or protect (the) life of my son."

Dziekanski, 40, was immigrating to Canada to join his mother in Kamloops, B.C., when he died.

Cisowski's supporters have organized a fundraising dinner on her behalf this weekend.

Wednesday, May 06, 2009

Braidwood Inquiry

Scheduled Witnesses (Subject To Change)

Monday, May 4, 2009

Dr. S. Lu (Psychiatrist)

From Mother Jones - Taser's Delirium Defence, March/April 2009:

Shao-Hua Lu, a psychiatrist who treats addicts at Vancouver General Hospital, hadn't heard of ED before 2007, when he began working on a Canadian government probe of Taser safety. "No [practicing] medical doctor would write down 'delirium' on a death certificate as a cause of death," says Lu, who trains Canadian Mounties to identify mental health problems, including various forms of delirium, in their subjects. "I don't understand why MEs would write that."


Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Brian Hilton (CBSA)

Binder Kooner (CBSA)

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Supt. W. Rideout (RCMP)

Inspector T. Lightfoot (RCMP)

Thursday, May 7, 2009

Don Ehrenholz (YVR Operations)

Dr. C. Kerr (Cardiologist)

See Tasers can cause death, inquiry told - CBC, May 20, 2008

Friday, May 8, 2009

Dr. Z. Tseng (Cardiac Electrophysiologist)

From the May 9, 2008 edition of the Toronto Star (reporting on Dr. Tseng's earlier appearance at the Braidwood Inquiry):

A heart-rhythm expert also told the inquiry there are real risks to Taser use, despite the company's safety claims.

"Just because somebody collapses of sudden death minutes later after a Taser application doesn't mean that the two are not connected," said Dr. Zian Tseng, a San Francisco cardiologist and electrophysiologist.

Tseng said any normal, healthy person could die from a jolt of the conducted energy weapon if the shock was given in the right area of the chest and during the vulnerable point in the beating of the heart.

He stressed the risk of death is far greater if there is adrenaline or illicit drugs coursing through the body or if the person has a history of heart or other medical issues.

Tseng fell into studying conducted energy weapons about three years ago when he created a media storm by telling a San Francisco newspaper the device could induce cardiac arrhythmia.

"Shortly thereafter I was contacted by Taser directly to reconsider my statements to the media. They even offered to support (my) research, to give me grant funding," Tseng said, adding he declined the offer in order to remain independent.

Tseng said there needs to be much more real-world studies on the use of the weapon, instead of using police officers – often large, healthy males – to test the device.

He also said medical examiners should be given more freedom to investigate such deaths, even seizing the weapon for investigation if necessary.

"If there's a person that dropped dead suddenly after Taser application and you can find nothing else on the autopsy, I would venture to say that's due to arrhythmic death."

The risk to suspects being shocked could almost be zero to the heart if police avoided using the weapon in the chest area, and Tsang suggested that be one of Braidwood's recommendations.

Tsang also said police should avoid repeated shocks to lessen the chance they'll set the heart into an abnormal rhythm.

He said the risks are very low of a person dying while being arrested by police.

"What we don't know is has the Taser increased that risk from that very low rate to a slightly higher rate."

Monday, May 04, 2009

Undisclosed notes on Dziekanski probe delay top Mountie's testimony

The discovery of undisclosed notes and email related to the investigation into Robert Dziekanski's death in 2007 delayed a senior RCMP officer's testimony Monday at a public inquiry being held in Vancouver.

Supt. Wayne Rideout, who was subpoenaed to testify at the inquiry into the Polish immigrant's death, surprised the inquiry with notes he has that no one has seen before and suggested he also had other relevant emails about the case. Dziekanski died minutes after an RCMP officer stunned him with a Taser several times.

Rideout, who supervised the RCMP's investigation of the Taser incident at Vancouver airport, was expected to explain on Monday why he decided not to immediately correct false information the Mounties had told the public about the incident.

The inquiry heard last month that in the first two days after Dziekanski died on Oct. 14, 2007, the RCMP's public statements on the incident contained false information about how many officers were involved, how many times Dziekanski was stunned and what state Dziekanski was in when approached by officers.

Cpl. Dale Carr testified last month he went to Rideout seeking to correct the record, but was told to hold off setting the record straight because "everything will be corrected eventually."

Rideout is now expected to testify on Wednesday, barring any more surprises. Lawyers at the inquiry said Monday they needed more time to study the material he provided.

The Mounties were called to Vancouver airport after Robert Dziekanski started acting strangely in the early hours of Oct. 14, 2007. They stunned him with a Taser within seconds of arriving, and he died shortly after. (Paul Pritchard)
Inquiry commissioner Thomas Braidwood ruled Rideout could only address his decisions about what RCMP media spokespeople had told the public following Dziekanski's death — despite a request by the lawyer for the Polish government to expand the scope of questions Rideout can be asked when he returns.

Don Rosenbloom wanted to question Rideout about why the RCMP fought to withhold amateur video of the Taser incident, and why investigators failed to question the four Mounties who were deployed to handle Dziekanski when discrepancies were discovered in their statements.

Dziekanski died on the floor of the airport shortly after being shocked five times by a police Taser. Cpl. Monty Robinson, Const. Gerry Rundel, Const. Bill Bentley and Const. Kwesi Millington had been sent to the international arrivals lounge in response to reports that Dziekanski was throwing furniture and causing a scene.

Braidwood said Monday that questioning how the RCMP investigated Dziekanski's death would open a Pandora's box.

"That topic would know no borders, and there would be no way to draw a line that makes any sense with reference to investigating how the RCMP investigated this matter. I don't think that should be included in my terms of reference," Braidwood said.

Braidwood, a retired B.C. Court of Appeal justice, is overseeing the provincially mandated inquiry. He will make recommendations to prevent similar deaths and he could make findings of misconduct against the officers or anyone else involved.

Dziekanski suffered delirium
Also on Monday, a psychiatrist who reviewed evidence of Dziekanski's behaviour leading up to his death testified he was likely in a state of "agitated delirium" before being hit several times with a Taser stun gun.

But Dr. Lu Shao-Hua testified exactly what caused that delirium remains a mystery. An expert in delirium syndrome as well as addiction medicine, Lu was hired by the Integrated Homicide Investigation Unit, which probed the death.

"There is a high degree of certainty Mr. Dziekanski was in a state of agitated delirium prior to the police incident and his death," Lu concluded in his April 9, 2008, report.

Lu testified Monday that his review took into account witness statements, Dziekanski's autopsy report and a 10-minute video of the incident shot by traveller Paul Pritchard.

"Excited delirium is not a term that we use in a medical sense," said Lu, who also testified a year ago during the first phase of the inquiry looking into the general use of Tasers by law enforcement.

"Delirium is a medical syndrome. It's not a disease in and of itself. Delirium is the symptom of some underlying condition," Lu said.

Delirium unlikely cause of Dziekanski's death: Psychiatrist

VANCOUVER — Robert Dziekanski was likely suffering from delirium when he was Tasered at Vancouver International Airport in October 2007, but delirium is unlikely to cause spontaneous death, a Vancouver psychiatrist testified Monday at the Braidwood Inquiry into how the Polish immigrant died.

"By and large, for an otherwise healthy individual, even if they have alcoholism, in a state of delirium and dehydration it's unlikely that a person would die spontaneously from these features," said Dr. Shaohua Lu, who prepared a psychiatric diagnosis of Dziekanski for the RCMP last year.

Lu's report was based on witness statements.

When asked about the seriousness of Dziekanski's condition by Helen Roberts, counsel for the federal government, Lu said medical attention was very important.

Lu testified many of the conditions Dziekanski was experiencing, such as sleep deprivation, dehydration, lack of language skills, and alcohol withdrawal, may precipitate delirium in some cases.

Dziekanski, who had come from Poland to live with his mother, had been travelling more than 24 hours and was unable to connect with his mother at the airport.

Just before someone called 911, he became agitated and threw a chair. Seconds later, police arrived and one officer gave Dziekanski, 40, five jolts with a Taser stun gun. He was then restrained but later died.

Walter Kosteckj, counsel for Zofia Cisowski, Dziekanski's mother, questioned the diagnosis based on Dziekanski's ability to follow directions, fill out customs forms and recognize police.

"The report is based on facts and assumptions I believed to be true at the time," said Lu. He added that making an exact diagnosis is difficult outside of a clinical setting and without talking to Dziekanski.

"In this particular situation, the diagnosis is not sure," said Lu.

RCMP Superintendent Wayne Rideout, who oversaw the homicide investigation into Dziekanski's death, was supposed to testify Monday, but instead he surprised the commission with notes the inquiry had not previously seen.

Rideout will return to testify on Wednesday.

The commission is expected to examine why the RCMP did not correct inaccurate information released in the wake of Dziekanski's death. Rideout will also be asked to testify about why civilian videotape that recorded the events surrounding Dziekanski's death was held by the RCMP for nearly two years.

Thursday, February 26, 2009

Taser's Delirium Defense

By Bernice Yeung
Mother Jones - March/April 2009

By all accounts, Patrick Lee was having too good a time at the Mercy Lounge, a Nashville rock club. He'd commenced the September 2005 evening by dropping a few hits of acid. Before long, the 21-year-old was tripping and determined to climb onstage. A bouncer eighty-sixed him and called the cops, who, according to witnesses, found Lee outside the club, babbling incoherently. Things went downhill fast. Lee made a move toward an officer and was hit with pepper spray. He ran a few feet and stripped off his clothes. The cops deployed their Tasers­, jolting Lee 19 times in all. By the time paramedics arrived, witnesses say, he was unresponsive. He died 39 hours later. The cause, a county medical examiner concluded, was "excited delirium."

For the past five years, this has been a common conclusion in deadly incidents involving Tasers, and the nation's top seller of electric stun guns prefers it that way; Taser International Inc. has twice sued medical examiners who cited its products as a contributing factor in a subject's death. At the same time, the company aggressively promotes awareness of excited delirium, an ill-defined condition that helps it fend off lawsuits. Thanks partly to testimony from a cast of ED proponents, several with financial ties to the company, Taser has lost just one wrongful-death case at trial out of 33 filed against it since 2001. (Dozens more lawsuits are pending.)

Taser's lone courtroom defeat, which it may appeal, involves Robert Heston, a California meth user who died after 25 jolts. Last June, the family's lawyers convinced a jury that Heston most likely died not of ED, but rather of cardiac arrest due to metabolic acidosis—a temporary state in agitated individuals that may be exacerbated by excessive Tasering, recent animal studies indicate. But in January, a suit by Patrick Lee's parents was dismissed after Taser argued that excited delirium was the culprit. "We look at excited delirium as a responsibility-shifting mechanism," says Peter Williamson, an attorney for the Hestons. "It's a way for the police department, the officer, and Taser to shift responsibility to the victim."

The company insists its devices never kill, but Amnesty International, the only organization to have compiled data on the issue, says there have been 334 fatalities following Taser jolts since 2001. In 69 of these cases, autopsy reports specifically cited ED as a cause of death.

"Of all in-custody deaths [not involving firearms], excited delirium syndrome is the most common form," notes Vincent Di Maio, a Taser expert witness, retired Texas medical examiner, and coauthor of the 2005 book Excited Delirium Syndrome: Cause of Death and Prevention.

But as a medical condition, the term is meaningless. "We have no idea what any of the causes are, what the biology behind it might be, what underlies it, how being in this state leads to death with supposedly some intervention with a Taser or other force," says Matthew Stanbrook, a faculty member at the University of Toronto medical school.

Purported ED signs range from "bizarre" behavior to sweating and high body temperature, attraction to shiny objects or glass, foaming at the mouth, a penchant for disrobing, aggression, and superhuman strength. Such symptoms could result from "alcohol withdrawal, acute schizophrenia, bipolar disease, stimulant drug intoxication, psychological illness plus stimulant drugs, hypoglycemia, an infection of the brain. I could go on," says Christine Hall, a Canadian ER physician who researches in-custody deaths.

"The bottom line is this," says Andrew Dennis, a Chicago surgeon, part-time police officer, and medical researcher who coauthored three studies of Taser's effects on swine. "You have a lot of people who are acting psychotic, and often law enforcement is asked to deal with them. Some subgroup of this population is going to die, and we don't know why. This potential at-risk group is the quote-unquote excited delirium group. But there are no common threads to identify this at-risk group. As far as I'm concerned, everything discussed about excited delirium is conjecture."

None of these concerns have stopped Taser from talking up ED in training sessions, literature, and court filings. The company attends conferences for police chiefs and medical examiners, where it distributes ED-related literature, and has doled out free copies of Di Maio's book. It also sends unsolicited materials to medical examiners when an in-custody death occurs in their jurisdiction. In 2002, Taser released a statement for police to use if someone died in a Taser-related incident. "We regret the unfortunate loss of life," it begins. "There are many cases where excited delirium caused by various mental disorders or medical conditions, that may or may not include drug use, can lead to a fatal conclusion."

The expression first appeared in medical documents in the 1800s, and for a time it was associated with deaths in asylums. It fell into disuse during the 1950s and was revived in the 1980s, essentially to describe the agitated state of cocaine addicts. Since then, ED has been the subject of dozens of articles aimed at law enforcement. (Among the authors are Jeffrey Ho, an ER doctor whom Taser pays to conduct studies and testify—he got $70,000 during a recent 12-month stretch—and Mark Kroll, a member of Taser's science advisory board who has cashed in at least $2.5 million in company stock options.)

The term has also gained traction among medical examiners and coroners. "People are looking for an explanation for some of these deaths," notes Stanbrook, "and this syndrome provides an answer that's convenient." (In an unpublished survey last year by a national medical examiners group, 67 of 187 MEs said Taser's litigi­ousness would affect their conclusions in cases involving stun guns.) Last October, prompted by the term's growing popularity in law enforcement, the American College of Emergency Physicians resolved to study whether ED should be considered as a diagnosis.

Several people I spoke with credit Taser for helping popularize excited delirium. Dennis, the surgeon-cop, first heard the term, he says, at a company training session five years ago; Shao-Hua Lu, a psychiatrist who treats addicts at Vancouver General Hospital, hadn't heard of ED before 2007, when he began working on a Canadian government probe of Taser safety. "No [practicing] medical doctor would write down 'delirium' on a death certificate as a cause of death," says Lu, who trains Canadian Mounties to identify mental health problems, including various forms of delirium, in their subjects. "I don't understand why MEs would write that."

Taser insists that any corporate outreach involving ED relates to safe use of its products. "We don't teach anything about excited delirium," says spokesman Steve Tuttle. "We let law enforcement agencies know that they need to be aware of it."

But the company is remarkably tight with America's foremost ED training and advocacy business. The Institute for the Prevention of In-Custody Deaths (ipicd) was cofounded by police trainer John Peters and an old acquaintance, Michael Brave, Taser's national litigation counsel.

At the time, Peters later stated in a deposition, he was reworking his firm's training regimen after hearing from other stun-gun merchants. "Some of the manufacturers said, you know, '[Police departments] are paying out lots of money in these lawsuits, and it's hurting us because they don't have money left over to buy our product.'"

In 2005, Peters filed corporate papers for the ipicd listing himself and Brave as the founding directors. Within six months, the institute was leading eight-hour sessions at Taser's Scottsdale, Arizona, compound, teaching cops to recognize ED and often touting Tasers as the most effective tool for subduing agitated individuals. In the first two years, Brave estimated in a deposition, Taser paid $70,000 to $80,000 for the sessions. To date, Peters says, the ipicd has certified some 10,000 officers worldwide as in-custody death prevention instructors.

Taser also pays the way for Peters and ipicd instructor David Berman to speak at outside conferences, directs business Peters' way, and helps plug the ipicd's annual conference in Las Vegas, where past presenters have included Taser-backed researchers and employees. A flyer for last October's three-day shindig, which drew 250 attendees, promised the "historic" opportunity to help form a "general consensus about excited delirium that will then be published in leading medical, legal, and law enforcement journals." As an expert witness for Taser, Peters charges $5,000 plus $2,750 per day; in 2007, he was paid about $42,000.

Peters sees nothing inappropriate about his Taser connections. "We are not aligned with them at all," he says, although "we did not distinguish ourselves enough" at the start. (Brave, now listed as an inactive director, says he remains a legal adviser at ipicd.) In any case, the institute will continue in its quest to entrench ED as a medical and psychological diagnosis, Peters says, "to quiet these folks" who don't believe it exists.

These folks include Heston attorney John Burton, who, not surprisingly, finds the ipicd/Taser bond problematic. "These guys want to help the police stop killing people, and they're trying to build a liability defense for when they do," he says. "The two things are in direct conflict."

Brave, for his part, has nothing but contempt for the company's critics. "How much more damage are we going to do to police officers by continuing to put forth this ignorant rhetoric?" he asks. "A druggie's mommy hires a plaintiff's attorney, and now we need to blame someone. Do we blame the person who sold them the drugs or the mommy who let them take the drugs or the kid who actually took the drugs? No. We blame the police and Taser, because they were present at the time of death."

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Canada 'brainwashed' by taser manufacturer, says police expert

May 13, 2008
By Suzanne Fournier, The Province

A police psychologist who has trained Vancouver police, RCMP and the FBI to defuse crises like hostage-takings for over 30 years says Canada has been "brainwashed" into buying the Taser and being trained by the manufacturer.

[Dr. Michael] Webster told the Braidwood Inquiry into Tasers Tuesday morning that "the police, in an attempt to justify their use of the weapon in many cases, have taken to citing the hypothetical disorder... excited delirium."

Both Webster and the first witness Tuesday, Vancouver psychiatrist Dr. Lu Shaohua, said the controversial phenomenon does not exist nor does it appear in any medical textbooks as a legitimate diagnosis.

Yet Webster noted Taser actively bombards medical examiners with pamphlets about "excited delirium" to cite as both a provocation for Taser use and even cause of death.

"Canadian law enforcement, and its American brothers and sisters, have been 'brainwashed' by companies like Taser International," said Webster.

Taser sales experts "have created a virtual world replete with avatars that wander about with the potential to manifest a horrific condition characterized by profuse sweating, superhuman strength and a penchant for smashing glass that appeals to well-meaning but psychologically unsophisticated police personnel," said Webster.

Webster noted Taser "has successfully defended itself against at least eight lawsuits in which it was alleged that the victims died of Taser shocks. The company argued that the cause of death was "excited delirium" and not the Taser.

Webster said he was "shocked" and "embarassed" to see the video of the RCMP Tasering Polish immigrant Robert Dziekanski at the Vancouver airport last Oct. 14, after the man had wandered around for eight hours without food or drink, lost, suffering from a language barrier and likely from the dehydrating effects of a long-haul flight.

"It is neither humane nor logical to inflict crippling pain on someone who has lost his mental balance," said Webster.

Webster, who trains police services all over the world, including Vancouver police in a one-week crisis management course, said that the safety of the Taser is still not resolved and it is crucial to give Canadian police more thorough training on crisis management skills before they resort to the Taser.

"If the Taser proves to be safe, its use in Canada (should) be restricted to only those situations involving a significant risk of death or grievous bodily harm; and that Canadian law enforcement be provided with crisis intervention skills during their basic training."