http://www.libraryjournal.com/article/CA6465592.htmlAn independent investigation of the Nov. 14, 2006 incident at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) library, in which a campus police officer used a Taser at least three times in subduing a passively resistant and verbally combative Iranian-American student, found that "the police response was substantially out of proportion to the provocation." It called the use of force "unnecessary, avoidable, and excessive." The incident, caught in part on cell phone cameras and broadcast on YouTube, generated protests and outrage.
The 77-page report, A Bad Night at Powell Library: The Events of November 14, 2006, states that "this story has no heroes" and notes that Mostafa Tabatabainejad could have obeyed the order to produce his ID. Still, investigators found that the campus police department’s policies give police unnecessary latitude, standing "alone in its legitimization of the Taser as a pain compliance device against passive resisters." The report, by the Police Assessment Resource Center of Los Angeles, recommends several policy changes, including limiting uses of Tasers on aggressive or violent subjects and prohibition of their use on passively resistant subjects and on handcuffed suspects.
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The library is staffed during extended hours by student employees and community service officers hired and trained by the campus police department. UCLA students have one official form of identification, the Bruin Card, which also serves as a library card. Students must agree to present the card when requested to establish their student status. While they found it "highly unlikely" that the CSO’s check of Tabatabainejad’s ID was motivated by his perceived ethnicity, as he has charged, the investigators noted that the failure of the CSO to check other students in the lab before Tabatabainejad could lead a reasonable person to "have at least some grounds to believe that he… was being targeted."
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The report also says that the officers overstated the aggression of student witnesses: "Our review of both the YouTube video and Library surveillance video casts strong doubt on assertions that the students grew hostile or posed a threat to the officers or Tabatabainejad, especially prior to the first application of the Taser."
Tabatabainejad has filed a federal lawsuit against UCLA, the police, and specific officers, contending that his civil rights were violated and that officers failed to comply with the Americans With Disabilities Act, according to the Los Angeles Times. The lawsuit states that he has bipolar disorder and had told the police so during the incident.