"Less Lethal" Flash-Bangs Leave Some Feeling the Burn
Peter Callahan was caught between two police lines in the West Florissant section of Ferguson, Mo., on Sunday night, when something fiery hot . A nearby protester's shirt briefly caught fire.
Among the debris protesters and journalists have in the days since Michael Brown was killed are canisters of the made by Combined Tactical Systems, a "less lethal" diversionary device that has made its way into law enforcement agencies' toolkits to carry out search warrants, and less frequently, to disperse crowds.
Earlier this year, a flash-bang when a police special response team threw one into a crib while entering a home on a narcotics warrant.
Accidents have been documented since the first days American tactical teams started using flash-bangs. In 1984, less than a year after the Los Angeles Police Department incorporated flash-bangs into their S.W.A.T. team, a when a device exploded at her back as a tactical team entered her home to carry out a drug raid.
Witnesses to this week's unrest in Ferguson told ProPublica it feels like the ground is shaking when the devices deploy nearby. "It was a real loud explosion and people began to run, but they didn't know where to run to," said Tef Poe, who the past 12 days.
The National Tactical Officers Association also offers on the use of diversionary devices including flash-bangs. Many tactical teams also attend training programs run by device manufacturers.
Peter Kraska, a professor in justice studies at Eastern Kentucky University who , contends that S.W.A.T. units typically offer much less training than the 250 hours per year the NTOA recommends, with "over 50 percent of teams in smaller jurisdictions receiving a mere 50 hours per year per officer," Kraska has reported.
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