 Marines and police officers with the Provost Marshals Office conducted annual taser training aboard Marine Corps Air Station Miramar on July 18th. It's really important because it adds another tool to your toolbox as far as a non-lethal means of containing a situation. So instead of going straight to your lethal weapon or just going hands-on in between that, there's different things you can use and one of those is the taser. Once tased, the electrical current contracts the muscles immobilizing the body. This is called neuromuscular incapacitation. If you have experience of getting tased, you can sort of take that to court and explain well sir, have you ever been tased or ma'am, have you ever been tased, you can actually explain what it feels like and you know exactly what it does to your body. From Marine Corps Air Station Miramar, I'm Corporal Owen Kimberle.