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University of Florida Taser incident

On September 17, 2007, a University of Florida student was stunned by police with a taser at a forum featuring then–U.S. Senator John Kerry. Kerry was addressing a Constitution Day forum at the University of Florida campus in Gainesville that was organized by the ACCENT Speakers Bureau, an agency of the university's student government. Andrew Meyer, a 21-year-old fourth-year undergraduate mass communication student, had initially been allowed to ask a question after the close of the question period. He asked Kerry whether he was a member of the Skull and Bones society and used the term "blowjob" in reference to the impeachment of Bill Clinton. Meyer was forcibly pulled away from the microphone. He was immediately restrained, removed, and subsequently arrested by university police. During his arrest, Meyer struggled and screamed for help. While six officers held Meyer down, one of the officers drive-stunned him with a taser following Meyer's shouted plea to the police "Don't tase me, bro!"

Details
Student At the time of the incident, Andrew Meyer was an undergraduate student at the University of Florida. Born in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, He received international publicity when videos were posted of police tasering him at the town hall forum featuring Senator Kerry. The Miami Herald stated that "Meyer's grandmother, Lucy Meyer of Pembroke Pines, Florida, told The Miami Herald that he is a hardworking student with no prior run-ins with the law." She also said, "He gets very, very overcome with passion for whatever he is feeling. Maybe that passion took over." Today, an American morning television show, interviewed Meyer a month after the incident, once he had negotiated probation. Meyer later attended the Florida International University College of Law, As of July 15, 2016, the phrase is no longer trademarked. Meyer wrote a book titled ''Don't Tase Me Bro! Real Questions, Fake News, and My Life as a Meme'', which he published on Amazon in December 2018. Incident prior to start of video Meyer was reportedly in line for access to the microphone when former Ambassador Dennis Jett, a University of Florida political science instructor and the forum's moderator, announced that one more question would be taken from the microphone on the right, as seen from the stage. Meyer grabbed a second microphone, which had been shut off, and demanded he be allowed to ask a question, asking, "Why don't you answer my questions? I have been waiting and listening to you speak in circles for the last two hours." He also stated, "These officers are going to arrest me," and "You will take my question because I have been listening to your crap for two hours." When an officer attempted to cut Meyer off and escort him out of the hall, Meyer broke away and continued to shout. Kerry then intervened and requested that Meyer be allowed to ask a question. Meyer was then brought back to the microphone with police officers on either side of him. Meyer then handed his camera to the woman who was standing in line in front of him and requested that she record him. After Kerry completed answering a prior question, Meyer was acknowledged by Kerry to pose his question. Video begins Meyer's video begins with him speaking for approximately 1 minute and 20 seconds. He starts by citing the book Armed Madhouse and its author Greg Palast's description of the 2004 U.S. presidential election and reports of election irregularities. According to The Washington Post, Meyer's question turned into "an increasingly agitated three-parter". Meyer questioned Kerry's concession of the 2004 U.S. presidential election, Kerry's support or lack of support of the efforts to impeach George W. Bush, Removal and arrest After Meyer's microphone was turned off, two University of Florida police officers attempted to take him away and arrest him. Steven Blank, ACCENT chairman, later said that the police "acted independently of ACCENT." Legal action After the incident, Meyer was arrested for inciting a riot and charged with resisting an officer and disturbing the peace and taken to Alachua County Jail. Meyer spent one night in the jail and was released the following morning. Police recommended charges of resisting arrest with violence, a felony, and disturbing the peace and interfering with school administrative functions, a misdemeanor. Meyer's attorney, Robert S. Griscti, stated he would seek to have the charges dismissed. According to the University of Florida, Meyer also accepted sanctions from the university for violations of the Student Code of Conduct. The sanctions were not made public because of student privacy laws. He returned as a student in the spring semester of 2008. == Issues raised ==
Issues raised
Allegations of excessive force CNN reported that student opinions on the University of Florida campus were evenly divided as to whether the officers acted properly. The day following this incident, about 300 students marched to the steps of campus police headquarters the following day with another 100 marching to Emerson Alumni Hall. They chanted that police used excessive force and waved signs that read "Stop police brutality", "Taze Pigs", "Freedom of Speech not a Felony", "Tasers Kill", and Meyer's words, "Don't Tase me, bro." They demanded that tasers be banned from campus and that charges be filed against the police officers who restrained and tased Meyer. Four weeks after the incident, the university sponsored a panel to discuss appropriate police practices. Fifteen people attended and one signed up to make comments. Free speech issues Some critics of the police action here have suggested that it was not Meyer's actions which led to his removal, but the content of his remarks. For example, writer Palast said, "When you bring up uncomfortable stuff, it's going to create discomfort. Obviously, if he was speaking about baseball scores—if he maybe had a different political viewpoint that wasn't seen as combative or outside of what's permissible—then the cops' backs wouldn't have been up." The American Civil Liberties Union's Florida chapter released a statement on September 18, 2007, expressing dismay over the incident. Versions of the incident Various news articles speculated that the incident was a stunt by Meyer, noting that he would post comedy videos on his personal website and arrange to have himself filmed by others. The reports also cited Meyer's behavior when no cameras were present as evidence that the incident was a prank. The police report claimed that "as [Meyer] was escorted [downstairs] with no cameras in sight, he remained quiet, but once the cameras made their way [downstairs] he started screaming and yelling again." Additionally, the report asserts that Meyer was "laughing and being lighthearted in the car, his demeanor completely changed once the cameras were not in sight." The police officers involved in the arrest claimed that during the ride, Meyer said: "I am not mad at you guys, you didn't do anything wrong, you were just trying to do your job." with whom he was unacquainted, before he spoke. Henry Perlstein, a university senior who has known Meyer since high school, said, "My first impression was that [the video] was a home movie he made for his friends because it was so surreal. Then I heard the screams and he sounded genuinely afraid." Amos Eshel, a fellow UF student who has known Meyer since middle school and who attended his arraignment in September 2007, later told reporters that Meyer does "like to speak his mind" but that Meyer is not the type of person who would attempt to start trouble. President Machen stated that "We plan to assemble a panel of faculty and students to review our police protocols, our management practices and the FDLE report to come up with a series of recommendations for the university." The State Attorney's Office will review the charges as well. The Miami Herald stated that, at the press conference, President Machen called the situation "regretful for us" and announced that two officers involved in the incident had been placed on paid administrative leave pending the outcome of the probe. University spokesman Steve Orlando said Meyer was asked to leave the microphone after his allotted time was up. However, a transcript of the event shows that this is untrue; he was not told to leave at any point. The university president "would not say whether he thought the latest episode was a prank." On October 24, the FDLE released a report on its investigation of the incident. The report concluded that Meyer may have planned a 'disruption' of the forum. It also cleared the police officers involved of any wrongdoing in subduing Meyer, saying that the officer's actions were justified. University President Bernie Machen stated that "I have full confidence in the police department" and that the two officers previously placed on paid administrative leave have been fully reinstated. Response from Senator Kerry On the day following the incident, Kerry's office issued a statement: {{quote|In 37 years of public appearances, through wars, protests and highly emotional events, I have never had a dialogue end this way. I believe I could have handled the situation without interruption, but I do not know what warnings or other exchanges transpired between the young man and the police prior to his barging to the front of the line and their intervention. I asked the police to allow me to answer the question and was in the process of responding when he was taken into custody. I was not aware that a taser was used until after I left the building. I hope that neither the student nor any of the police were injured. I regret enormously that a good healthy discussion was interrupted.|John Kerry{{cite letter == Popular culture ==
Popular culture
The most viewed video of the taser incident, shot by Kyle Mitchell of The Gainesville Sun, has more than 8 million views on YouTube as of October 2023. Time selected the video as one of YouTube's 50 Best Videos in March 2010. In addition, • Mick Jones, former guitarist for The Clash, wrote and published a song inspired by the event titled "Don't Tase Me, Bro". • New wave band Devo's song "Don't Shoot (I'm a Man)" from 2010 contains the lyric "They'll hunt you down and tase you, bro," and ends with the refrain "Don't tase me, bro!" In 2012, Devo recorded a song called "Don't Roof Rack Me, Bro! (Seamus Unleashed)," referring to then-presidential candidate Mitt Romney's road trip with his dog Seamus in a crate atop his vehicle. • On the game platform Roblox, a gear under the name of "Laser Electrocutor" was uploaded to the Gears section of the Avatar Shop on January 6, 2012. The description of the item said "Don't laser electrocute me bro!". • The quote was also used by nerdcore rapper MC Lars in his song "True Player for Real." • Ben Folds Five used the phrase in their 2012 song "Erase Me". • In an episode of ''truTV Presents: World's Dumbest...'', after a clip showing a "sovereign citizen" refusing to release control of his camera before entering a courtroom and having a taser used on him, a "taze montage" was shown where it had part of the video where Meyer said the phrase and then being tasered. • In The Boondocks episode "It's a Black President, Huey Freeman", Grandad utters the phrase before being tazed. • In Total Drama World Tour's episode "The Ex-Files", Tyler references the event while seeing an alien by saying, "Don't probe me, bro!" • In The Cleveland Show season 2 episode 5, "Little Man on Campus", both Cleveland Brown and Tim the Bear realize that Holt is in disguise in his high school persona. As Tim is about to maul him, a panicked Holt recites a series of media and internet memes, including "Don't Tase Me, Bro!" • In The Amazing Spider-Man Spider-Man quotes the phrase after dodging a taser attack from a prison security guard. • An episode of the 2010 TV series The Good Guys had an episode titled "Don't Tase Me, Bro" involving an incident with a taser, during which the character tased said, "Don't tase me, bro." • An October 2010 comic strip by the webcomic Penny Arcade referenced the incident with the phrase "Don't stake me, bro", said by a creature from Castlevania: Lords of Shadow. • In the 2014 video game Watch Dogs, the line appears as one of the various popular culture references and internet memes seen when the player hacks a billboard. • In Elf Bowling, one of the elves used as a bowling pin yells, "Don't taze me, bro!" • In the 2014 animated film Mr. Peabody & Sherman, Greek hero Agamemnon, voiced by Patrick Warburton, says, "Don't tase me, bro" after police use a taser to subdue French revolutionary Robespierre (voiced by Guillaume Aretos). • In "Hundred Dollar Gus" of Uncle Grandpa, Mr. Gus blames Pizza Steve for whatever happens to him after Uncle Grandpa calls the cops, causing them to tackle him to the ground where he says the phrase before being tasered. • In episode 47 of Sonic Boom (Fuzzy Puppy Buddies), Dave the Intern is framed by Orbot and Cubot and is subsequently arrested. While being taken away, he pleads innocent and finishes with "Don't taze me, bro!" before going off-screen. • In season 26 episode 12 "The Musk Who Fell to Earth" of The Simpsons, Homer says, "don't take me, bro" inside his car after Elon Musk asks him for more ideas. • A Tom the Dancing Bug comic strip by Ruben Bolling outlines a fictional history of the expression. • In the Android/iOS game Sky Force Reloaded, one of the unlockable technicians is called "Tase Mebro". • In his album Solid State, Jonathan Coulton uses the phrase as part of the song "Don't Feed the Trolls". • In the pilot episode of ''Bob's Burgers'' a protester can be seen with a sign that reads "Don't Taste Me Bro" in protest of Bob's alleged use of human flesh in his burger meat. • Comedian Eric Andre utters the phrase when he is arrested at a town hall meeting in Season 2 Episode 5 of The Eric Andre Show. • In season 5 episode 2 of Brooklyn Nine-Nine the character Jake Peralta says, "Don't taze me man, do you remember that, so funny...but don't" when being escorted from the warden's office by a guard. • In the 2022 film Minions: The Rise of Gru, Gru uses a Cheese-Ray on multiple customers in an ice cream parlor, causing the employee behind the counter to plead "Don't cheese me, bro." • In a 2014 episode of The Fairly OddParents titled "Weirdo's on a Train", the main character's teacher (Mr. Crocker) uses the phrase with the main character's father while riding a mall kiddie train. • In Slugterra: Ghoul from Beyond, Kord Zane told Eli Shane, who's being controlled by The Goon, that he would not do this before saying "Don't Tazerling me, bro!" But he is been shot by an Amperling. • In the 13th episode of season 3 of Person of Interest, titled 4C, the phrase is said to protest the use of an electric stun belt. == See also ==
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