Santa Fe New Mexican

Critics question the ‘less lethal’ force used during Texas protests

- By Acacia Coronado

AUSTIN, Texas — When a participan­t at a rally in Austin to protest police brutality threw a rock at a line of officers in the Texas capital, officers responded by firing beanbag rounds — ammunition that law enforcemen­t deems “less lethal” than bullets.

A beanbag cracked 20-yearold Justin Howell’s skull and, according to his family, damaged his brain. Adding to the pain, police admit the Texas State University student wasn’t the intended target.

Protesters took to the streets in Austin and across the nation following the May 25 police killing of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s. In some instances, police reacted with force so extreme that while their intent may not be to kill, the effects were devastatin­g.

Pressure has mounted for a change in police tactics since Howell was injured. He was not accused of any crime. He was hospitaliz­ed in critical condition May 31 and was discharged Wednesday to a long-term rehabilita­tion facility for intensive neurologic­al, physical and occupation­al therapy. His brother has questioned why no one is talking about police use of less lethal but still dangerous munitions.

“If we only talk about policing in terms of policies and processes or the weapons that police use when someone dies or when they are ‘properly lethal’ and not less lethal, we’re missing a big portion of the conversati­on,” said Josh Howell, a computer science graduate student at Texas A&M University.

The Austin Police Department said in a news release that, before June 1, its officers used Def-Tec 12-gauge beanbag munitions on protesters. According to the manufactur­er’s website, they have a velocity of 184 mph.

The growing use of less lethal weapons is “cause for grave concern” and may sometimes violate internatio­nal law, said Agnes Callamard, director of Global Freedom of Expression at Columbia University and a U.N. adviser.

From 1990 to 2014, projectile­s caused 53 deaths and 300 permanent disabiliti­es among 1,984 serious injuries recorded by medical workers in over a dozen countries, according to Rohini Haar, an emergency room doctor in Oakland, Calif., and primary author of the 2016 Physicians for Human Rights report.

Ishia Lynette, a spokeswoma­n for the Austin Justice Coalition, said her group had been organizing a rally with an expected 10,000 attendees, but that was canceled after Howell was shot. With anger flaring on both sides, the organizati­on that advocates for racial justice feared confrontat­ions could arise.

“I feel safe in some sense, but it is always in the back of my head, the what if ? Other people can incite violence, whether that be other protesters or the police,” Lynette said.

The Austin City Council has since begun an overhaul of the police department, banning the use of less lethal munitions and tear gas in crowds participat­ing in free speech and prohibitin­g the use of chokeholds. The attack on Howell is one of more than 100 under investigat­ion.

Lynette hailed the city’s efforts to change, but said more needs to be done. Her organizati­on also has been calling for Austin police Chief Brian Manley to resign.

“They recently banned chokeholds, rubber bullets, beanbags,” she said. “These are small things, but we need them to take more actions to not hurt any more protesters. Since then, I have seen videos of them operating in the same way. If they would uphold what they said, it is not enough, but it is a start.”

David Foster, who captured on video the moments after Howell was shot, said he saw protesters throwing fist-sized rocks and water bottles at the line of police on an overpass. Then he saw Howell fall. He was bleeding heavily and went into a seizure, Foster said.

As medical volunteers with red crosses on their arms helped Foster to move Howell to a safe place, officers again opened fire. Foster’s video shows the police firing towards them.

Manley said at a news conference that Howell was not the intended target, insisting that the officer was aiming for the person who he said attacked the police line near the police department headquarte­rs.

“One of the officers fired their less lethal munition at that individual, apparently, but it struck this victim instead,” Manley said. “Our thoughts and prayers are with his family, and we hope his condition will improve quickly.”

Howell was not the first person at the Austin rallies to be injured by police. A day earlier, 16-year-old Brad Levi Ayala, who was watching a protest from a distance, was also shot in the head with a beanbag.

“We can’t really take comfort in the phrase ‘less lethal,’ ” Josh Howell said. “Because if what we mean is less lethal than a bullet, that’s not a high bar to clear.”

 ?? COURTESY PHOTO ?? Justin Howel was seriously injured after being struck by police beanbag rounds.
COURTESY PHOTO Justin Howel was seriously injured after being struck by police beanbag rounds.

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