CORRECTED ANSWER:  I believe that the answer is no, at least in some contexts. 
 
For example, suppose that
$X = $Spec $k$, with $k$ a field, and $F = {\mathbb Z}\_{\ell}(1)$.  Then
$U = $Spec $l$ for some finite separable extension $l$ of $k$, and $H^1(U,F)
= \ell$-adic completion of $l^{\times}$, which I will denote by $\widehat{l^{\times}}$.

Thus the stalk of the presheaf $U \mapsto H^1(U,F)$ (and hence of the associated sheaf)
at the (unique) geometrix point of $X$ is the direct limit over $l$ of $\widehat{l^{\times}}.$

This direct limit need not vanish.  For example, if $k$ is finite, then so is $l$,
and $\widehat{l^{\times}}$ is just the $\ell$-Sylow subgroup of $l$.  Thus the stalk
in this case is just $\bar{k}^{\times}[\ell^{\infty}],$ the group of $\ell$-power roots of unity in $\bar{k}$.

This fits with a certain intuition, namely that one has to go to smaller and small etale neighbourhoods to trivialize $F_n$ as $n$ increases, and hence one can't kill of cohomology
classes in $H^i(U,F)$ just by restricting to some $V$.  

<STRIKE>
I think that the answer is yes.  Here is a proof (hopefully blunder-free):

It is true for the presheaf $U \mapsto H^i(U,F\_1).$  In other words, if we fix $U$,
then for each element $h \in H^i(U,F\_1)$ and each geometric point $x$ of $U$,
there is an etale n.h. $V$ of $x$ such that $h\_{| V} = 0.$  Since $H^i(U,F\_1)$
is finite dimensional, there is a $V$ that works for the whole of $H^i(U,F\_1)$ at once.

I claim that then $H^i(U,F\_n)$ restricts to $0$ on $V$ as well.

To see this, consider the exact sequence $0 \to F\_n \to F\_{n+1} \to F\_1 \to 0.$
Applying $H^i(U,\text{--})$ to this yields a middle exact sequence
$H^i(U,F\_n) \to H^i(U,F\_{n+1}) \to H^i(U,F\_1).$   Applying $H^i(V,\text{--})$
yields a middle exact sequence
$H^i(V,F\_n)\to H^i(V,F\_{n+1}) \to H^i(V,F\_1).$  Restriction gives a map from the
first of these sequences to the second.  It is zero on the two outer terms, by induction
together with the case $n = 1$ proved above, and so is zero on the inner term.  

This shows that restricting from $U$ to $V$ kills $H^i(U,F_n)$ for all $n$, and hence
$H^i(U,F)$, as required.

EDIT: As was noted in the comment below, this proof assumes that $F$ is 
${\mathbb Z}_{\ell}$ -flat.  Let me sketch an argument that hopefully handles the general case:

Put $F$ in a short exact sequence $0 \to F\_{tors} \to F \to F\_{fl} \to 0.$  The same kind
of argument as above reduces us to checking $F\_{fl}$ and $F\_{tors}$ separately.  The above proof handles the case of $F\_{fl}$, while $F\_{tors} = F\_{tors,n}$ for some large enough $n$,
and so the projective limit collapses in this case and there is nothing to check.  

(Note: I am assuming some basic kind of finiteness assumption on $F$ here, so that the above
makes sense.  Constructibility should be enough.)

</STRIKE>