Posted on 08/13/2014 9:42:08 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
Police use a range of non-lethal weapons to maintain social order, quell civil disturbances and stop political violence.
The scenes of violent confrontation in Ferguson, Missouri, over three straight nights show angry African-American residents protesting in response to a police shooting currently under investigation. To counter the crowds, local police have attempted to use the same techniques that security forces use around the world, including tear gas, bean bag rounds and wooden bullets.
Riot control police wearing helmets, visors, body armor and gas masks are called in for disturbances ranging from rowdy soccer matches and merchandise looting to anti-war protests. Civil disorder, whatever the source, can be quelled with a variety of methods, increasingly taken from the military arsenal:
Tear gas
Deployed at demonstrations from Tahrir Square to Port-au-Prince to prevent looting, disperse crowds and promote security, one of the most commonly used riot control agents around the world is tear gas. Known as a lachrymatory substance for the irritation that generates teary eyes and difficulty breathing, the chemical is usually discharged from a canister that is fired from a grenade launcher towards a crowd.
CS and CN are most frequently used gases. Dispenser methods include backpacks and even drone attachments for larger aerial volumes. Pepper spray is another lachrymatory agent, whose effects can last up to two hours, considerably longer than normal tear gas. The active ingredient, capsaicin, is sprayed directly onto people as at a 2011 tuition-hike protest at the University of California, Davis.
Baton rounds
This category includes four separate but related types of crowd control: rubber bullets, plastic bullets, wooden bullets and bean-bag rounds.
Rubber bullets, which are sometimes just rubber-coated steel bullets, can be fired from normal firearms or dedicated riot-control weapons. They are used as a non-lethal alternative to standard metal bullets but often cause significant pain and result in hematomas and contusions. As with similar weapons, they are more dangerous when fired from close range. When aimed at peoples heads, they can cause fatal damage.
Plastic bullets were developed by British forces to use in Northern Ireland to be more safe than rubber bullets, and carried less risk of ricocheting uncontrollably. Used to quell the recent Missouri violence, wooden pellets also cause bruises and welts. Shot from a distance, the ammunition is intended to administer pain compliance. Police in Oakland agreed in 2004 to stop using this technique after a lawsuit.
Bean bag rounds, also referred to as "flexible baton rounds," are fired as shells from a regular 12-gauge shotgun often with a bright colored tag to differentiate the weapon. The lead shot disperses in the air within a small fabric sack, spreading impact over one square-inch on the target. The blow often causes a muscle spasm, temporarily disabling the subject. This method has on average caused one death per year in the U.S.
So as not to cause internal bleeding or disrupted heartbeat, officers are instructed to aim at extremities. During Occupy protests in Oakland, veteran activist Scott Olsens skull was fractured by a bean bag round.
Liquid fire
When standard police vehicles are not sufficient for forcefully deploying riot officers, a department often sends horse-mounted units, busloads of additional policemen and armored vehicles, such as Mine-Resistant Ambush Protected (MRAP) jeeps. Water cannons can spray a high-velocity stream and were first used on fireboats, before being truck-mounted in the 1930s. They were widely used during the Civil Rights Movement.
While advocacy groups and vendors disagree on what form of riot control is most safe or effective, water cannons are not widely used in the U.S. today. However, they are used in police crackdowns in other countries, from student marches in Chile to demonstrations against gang rape in India.
Stink bombs or liquids causing a foul odor are sometimes used, and testing has been done on sticky foam that can immobilize rioters. Moreover, Israeli soldiers in the West Bank often use skunk water to disperse protesters.
Physical barriers
Known as kettling or corralling, police use containment tactics to cordon off a crowd and either direct people towards one exit or prevent them from leaving the area entirely. The method is seen as controversial because it often traps bystanders in the same location and has been criticized as a violation of civil liberties.
Trapping protesters in a confined space stops other individuals from joining and can divide a long march up into several enclosed sections to minimize mobility for the crowd. Sealing access roads and exits often tires out protesters, and gives police an opportunity to videotape or photograph people who might later be arrested.
To disperse a crowd, security forces can move quickly in a coordinated line towards the gathering. Baton charges are generally only used as a last resort. Clubs and riot shields raised can inflict pain, forcing people away from the scene due to the actual impact or just the fear of being struck.
To prevent confrontations beforehand, long metal bike racks are used at public events in controlling the movement of large numbers of people attending parades, rallies and festivals. Organizers of such events deploy these objects at the venue to manage crowds. At mass gatherings, these provide a psychological and tangible way of pushing individuals away from accessing certain zones.
Temporary fencing can enhance public safety or provide theft deterrence. Composed of steel or lighter-weight plastic, such barriers are often joined to prevent them from being knocked down, and the standard height is 43 inches. Wooden sawhorses with the writing Police Line Do Not Cross were formerly used for the same purpose.
Wave weapons
Stun guns and Tasers use electro-shock pulses to incapacitate people. In the first half of the last decade, more than 100 people died from such police action across the U.S., which has led some police departments to consider less lethal weaponry.
Riot police in New York City deployed Long Range Acoustic Devices (LRAD) during the Republican National Convention of 2004 and Occupy Wall Street protests of 2011 as loud speakers, but not as sound cannons. Weighing up to 300 lbs., the low-frequency sonic weapons emit pain-inducing tones.
The Active Denial System (ADS), known informally as a heat ray, was deployed to Afghanistan and has been acquired by the Los Angeles Sheriffs Department for potential prison riot use. With a directed-energy blast, the weapon increases skin temperature with a burning sensation, using similar radiation technology to a microwave.
Never saw anybody go from don’t-tread-on-me tiger to obama lap-kitten so fast as Jan (meeowww) Brewer.
Explain please. I don’t get it. Does it have to do with the post?
The policeman might well have been very wrong in shooting the kid.
That doesn't excuse what has happened since then, which is actually worse for the community that the one bad act of a possibly trigger happy cop, despite how horrific that was.
Want to understand what 3 or 4 days of rioting will do to a community?
Visit Detroit.
Ferguson protesters are going to need to learn anti-crowd-control techniques against the out of control police and a political leadership that is ordering rubber bullets, sound weapons, and tear gas to be used against peaceful, sign-holding protesters.
One such technique uses bees. Hornets nests launched into police lines after they start firing tear gas.
Another technique is to throw caltrops onto the street in the tear gas in the path of the police march.
Mmmkay, but why are you directing that response at me?
what idiot wrote this? “wooden bullets”? good grief.
i would think they’d be considered lethal, splintering and such. wow.
“i would think theyd be considered lethal, splintering and such. wow.”
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Yep....I wouldn’t want to get hit by one. Cops in my part of the world tend to use bean-bag rounds for that sort of thing, and I wouldn’t want to get hit by one of those either.
I was rooting for this:
What’s also wrong is that rioting does more damage to the community than the incident, which I am not sure I have a complete knowledge of how it played out. Who wants to set up a business and hire a few employees when you know that your small business or branch of the business is likely to be burned to the ground. It also hurts the racial minorities who need the businesses to come to that area to employ or offer educational financial assistance. Overall, rioting is self-destructive.
A mistake. It was not meant to be directed at you.
Nope. Oops, wrong post. I was trying to comment on a Jan Brewer Post. Sorry for the confusion.
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