Report: 9-year-old who skipped school is Tasered

Catch up with NBC News Clone on today's hot topic: Report 9 Year Old Who Skipped School Tasered Flna424518 - Breaking News | NBC News Clone. Our editorial team reformatted this story for clarity and speed.

MOUNT STERLING, Ohio -- An Ohio police officer says he used a stun gun twice on a 9-year-old who skipped school because the child refused to cooperate with his commands.

Details of the incident, which resulted in the shutdown of a village police force, were released Monday, The Columbus Dispatch reported. The Mount Sterling officer went to the boy's home on a truancy complaint last week. He says the child's mother warned the boy, who weighs between 200 and 250 pounds, to obey the officer or he'd be shocked.

According to a copy of the police report provided by the mayor’s office to msnbc.com, the officer wrote that the boy “dropped to the floor and became dead weight” and lay on his hands to prevent being handcuffed.

“He refused any and all orders. I told him if he did not stop flailing and place his hands behind his back, I would deploy the Taser on him. He still did not comply to my orders to stop resisting,” the officer wrote.

The officer said he deployed the stun gun twice before he was able to handcuff the boy. The child was checked by a medic before being taken to the sheriff’s office, and a delinquency count of resisting arrest was added to his truancy charge, according to the police report.

The village police chief, Mike McCoy, announced Monday night that he will resign from his post but said it has nothing to do with the Taser incident. McCoy read a statement that said the village’s declining budget keeps him from doing his job, according to the Dispatch.

“Basically, the funds we have here are very low and he wasn’t able to keep in budget,” Mayor Charles Neff said of the police chief.

McCoy was placed on paid leave late last week from his $49,900-a-year job for waiting two days before telling the mayor about the incident.

The loss of the chief effectively meant the end of the village’s police department, since he was the only full-time officer. The others were part time or volunteers, Neff has said.

The Madison County Sheriff’s Office has taken on the task of patrolling Mount Sterling, which has a population of about 1,800.

Neff said state authorities are investigating whether the officer used excessive force or otherwise acted inappropriately in subduing the boy.

Read the full Columbus Dispatch story.

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