Check the video. At 13:27 he begins unscrewing the battery compartment and finishes at 13:38. All the electronic is still there, and he has removed a good 5.5 inches of tubing (the length of 2x 18650 batteries). Given that all the electronic is still there and it measures less than 480mm, it is very possible that it is prohibited. The very question is wheter the electronic, without the batteries, satisfies the may be discharged criteria. I don't personnaly own a SB, so I can't positively confirm, but I'd guess that those are just built with relatively simple capacitors and inductances, and that therefore they may be discharged even when the batteries are not present. Remember how old radios used to keep playing 2-3 seconds after you unpluggued them? Same principle here. If there's one remaning "shot" in the baton after you remove the batteries and the battery compartment, and that "shot" may be discharged, then it could pass the the device is designed or altered so that the electrical charge may be discharged when the device is of a length of less than 480 mm criteria.
It's very possible that they may be be discharged, just not as simply as the push of a button like when the batteries are present, and that would qualify them as prohibited weapon. Think like how an AR15 lower receiver is a restricted weapon although it can't reasonnably fire a bullet by itself (it's not a perfect comparison, just the best I can think of right now).
As I said, it's not clear-cut, and even if I had one in my lab that I could test, I'm not sure I could come to the conclusion that it's prohibited or not. The very word "may" is very subjective, and it's pretty much the part that's left for interpretation. That's the part that's decided by judges and lawyers, not engineers or a simple measuring tape. My best guess is that 2 judges listening to the same arguments from 2 lawyers could come up with a different verdict.
ON position flashlight, unscrew compartment = nothing. No juice. I'm sure this all was gone over with a fine tooth comb. No internet investigator without the item in his hands can prohibit it himself.
Maybe if you want to hold the batteries in and use your tongue as a contact... I may reimburse your purchase if you buy one and make a video of you doing this.
It wasn't designed to stun when it's not fully assembled, which is why I asked which video you were watching. Some guys on here are as bad as the RCMP lab.
Another poster already disproved your BS above me.




















































