Page 64 - Legal Guide DEMO
P. 64
LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO
Task: Pepper Spray
LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO
Martinez v. New Mexico Dept. Of Public Safety, 47 Fed. Appx. 513
LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO
(10 Cir. 2002).
th
It is unreasonable to use pepper-spray as a pain compliance
technique where the suspect is restrained in handcuffs and is only
being verbally resistant.
LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO
• Pain Compliance techniques can be immediately stopped when the
suspect responds with compliance. The effects of pepper-spray
LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO
cannot be immediately stopped upon compliance.
• See also, Vineyard v. Wilson, 311 F.3d. 1340 (11 Cir. 2002) for a
th
similar conclusion.
LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO
63
LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO
©2020 Jack Ryan Legal & Liability Risk Management Institute