The FBI is investigating how the son of a Kansas City, Missouri, cop ended up in critical condition after a police officer used a Taser on him during a traffic stop over the weekend.
Police in Independence, Missouri, say officer Tim Runnels pulled over the car that 17-year-old Bryce Masters was driving after the officer ran the car’s tags and discovered a warrant linked to a female driver. Police said Masters “physically resisted” officers’ demands to step out of the car and that at some point Runnels used his stun gun to subdue the teen.
Independence, a suburb of Kansas City, sits across the state from the city of Ferguson where the police shooting of Michael Brown, an unarmed black teenager, set off widespread protests last month. In that case, the FBI and the Department of Justice are running parallel investigations to the one being conducted by local law enforcement.
At a news conference this week, Independence Police Maj. Paul Thurman said the officer’s use of his stun gun was within department policy and that Masters was able to exit the car on his own after being shocked. Thurman said Masters collapsed moments later and that the officer requested an ambulance to the scene.
But witness accounts contradict those claims. Witnesses said after the officer used his stun gun on Masters he dragged him from the car to the sidewalk and that the officer then placed his foot on Masters’s back as he convulsed and blood dripped from the teen’s mouth.
“You could tell the kid was going into convulsions,” witness Michelle Baker told local station WDAF-TV. Baker said the officer turned Baker over and that his head was dangling and “he had blood coming out.”
“He was just like on the ground twitching,” Curtis Martin, a friend of Masters, told the local Fox affiliate. Martin told reporters that Masters was headed to his house to play video games and that when he heard his car pull up to his house he saw a cop car parked behind it.
Martin said that he saw the officer at the car’s passenger side and heard the officer ordering Masters to roll down the window.
“I hear him say from my porch, I can’t roll down my window, it’s broke,” Martin told the Fox station.
Police say during the confrontation that followed Officer Runnels warned Masters several times that he was going to the teen if he didn’t stop resisting.









