Testimony Reveals Confusion, Cuypers Not a  Threat Before Tasing

Three officers who testified against Ian Cuypers in a July 2024 municipal court trial now face new scrutiny as their own words contradict the justifications for force used during the incident. Cuypers, who was tased during a traffic stop while working as a DoorDash driver, is suing the City of Superior and the officers for civil rights violations.

At trial, Officers Justin Taylor and Taylor Gaard, along with Sgt. Matthew Brown, offered overlapping accounts that point to a confused, unarmed motorist met with multiple conflicting police commands.

“Yes, multiple officers were giving commands. I can see how that could be confusing.” — Officer Justin Taylor

Taylor initiated the stop for a wrong-way traffic violation. He and Gaard approached the vehicle with weapons drawn. According to Gaard:

“We were all shouting commands. In hindsight, it may have been hard for him to understand.”

Cuypers reportedly asked “Why?” multiple times before being tased.

Crucially, all three officers confirmed they did not observe a weapon or a direct threat. Taylor stated:

“I couldn’t see exactly what he was reaching for. It could have been nothing.”

Gaard likewise admitted:

“I didn’t see a weapon, but he moved his hand fast and didn’t comply. I took that as a threat.”

Sgt. Brown, the supervisor on scene, echoed those concerns:

“Looking back, we could’ve slowed things down. There wasn’t an immediate threat.”

“The video shows the driver asking questions. He doesn’t look like someone trying to flee or attack.”

Additional quotes raise further concern:

“He seemed confused. He kept asking ‘What’s going on?’” — Officer Justin Taylor

“He didn’t respond, just kept asking ‘Why?’” — Officer Gaard

“There was definitely overlap in commands. That’s something we’re reviewing internally.” — Sgt. Brown

These admissions could weigh heavily in the federal lawsuit, where Cuypers alleges excessive force and unlawful arrest. A municipal jury acquitted him of obstruction charges.


Potential Liability for Taxpayers

Open questions

City Hall Silence

The silence from Superior’s City Council and Mayor’s Office regarding the tasing of a DoorDash driver speaks volumes. Not a single public statement has addressed the incident — no context, no concern, and no commitment to transparency. The irony is sharpest with Councilor Nick Ledin, a civics teacher who regularly teaches the values of public accountability and democratic engagement, yet remains mute as a public official. With an election looming in April, his silence is not just politically risky — it’s civically embarrassing. If you’re a student looking to your leaders for real-world examples of civic courage, the lesson here is deeply disappointing.

Disclaimer

#TheNewsTheTelegramSkips

#TelegramCoversUpNotNews

Two yellow trucks labeled 'Cash Only' delivering money to a large sinkhole in a rural area.

City, County, and Schools Spent $1B Since 2018 — You Got Street Cracks, Empty Promises, and a Tax Bill That Whispers ‘Bend Over‘

Soupnutz Crashes Into a Billion-Dollar Budget Party — No Confetti, Just Receipts You know it’s bad when a snarky blog stumbles into a billion dollars in public spending and the reaction from City Hall is basically a collective “Oops.” No conspiracy theory here, folks. This isn’t back-of-the-napkin math or some guy in a Facebook comment section yelling about chemtrails and potholes. This is from the

Read More »
A character resembling Santa Claus with horns and sunglasses, sitting in a sleigh holding newspapers.

Krampus Jim Strikes Again: Superior’s Naughty List Is Getting Longer

Welcome to Christmas in the Paine, where the lights are bright, the debt is brighter, and City Hall keeps singing carols while quietly setting fire to the balance sheet. This year’s holiday hit isn’t from Bing Crosby. It’s from the citizens who noticed the tree is decorated with lawsuits, the gifts are IOUs, and the sleigh is financed over 20 years. Let’s sing along, shall

Read More »
Cartoon illustration depicting a snowy winter scene with a tax hike theme and characters interacting.

How the Superior School Board Stole Christmas (and Your Equity)

🎄 A Very Taxing Christmas: How the Superior School District Gifted You a Lump of Coal and Another Property Tax Hike ❄️ “Twas the week before Christmas, and all through the halls,Not a brain cell was stirring in budget-filled stalls…” Soupnutz Exclusive: The Deepest Dive into the School District’s Murky Money Pit Is Coming Brace yourselves, taxpayers.This isn’t just another snarky sleigh ride through the

Read More »
Two men shaking hands in front of a building with a 'For Rent' sign and a crowd holding protest signs.

SHA: Superior’s Hidden Agenda or Superior’s Housing Authority?

Superior’s Housing Time Bomb: Worst-Case Scenario for 2026–2027 Featuring Mayor Jim Paine, the Rubber Stamp Choir, and the Ghost of Housing Authorities Past SoupNutz Exclusive Forecast “Ain’t nobody got time for affordable housing when your mayor’s doing donuts on the Constitution.” Welcome to the predictive trainwreck nobody in Superior wanted, yet everyone desperately needs. This is the SoupNutz™ Official 24‑Month Worst‑Case Risk Forecast for the

Read More »
A cartoon depiction of a man in a suit standing in a courtroom surrounded by scattered papers and a clock on the wall.

BREAKING : Superior’s Dynamic Duds, Mayor Jim and Jason Serck, Face Civil Rights Jury Trial — City Budget Braces for Impact. (Court Dates Inside)

BREAKING: 2700 Winter Lawsuit Moves Toward Trial, Superior Still Pretending It’s All Normal Well, grab your calendars and mark your dysfunction bingo cards, folks — the case of 2700 Winter, LLC v. Jim “What Zoning?” Paine is officially marching toward a January 2027 jury trial. That’s right. While the City of Sue-perior can’t seem to remember what the words “public hearing” mean, the federal court

Read More »