USA TODAY US Edition

Officer: MPs asked about using ‘heat ray’ at DC rally

- Savannah Behrmann Contributi­ng: Nicholas Wu, John Fritze,Tom Vanden Brook

WASHINGTON – Federal police asked the National Guard whether they had a “heat ray” officers could use against protesters gathered near the White House this summer, according to a letter sent to Congress from a senior officer involved with responding to the protest.

The inquiry for these tools came just hours before demonstrat­ors protesting on June 1, following the death of George Floyd, were forcibly removed from the Lafayette Square in Washington D.C. by authoritie­s, using chemical irritants, rubber bullets and shields.

President Donald Trump then walked with members of his administra­tion to historic St. John’s Church, and posed with a Bible, drawing wide condemnati­on.

In written responses to the House Committee on Natural Resources, which were obtained and shared by NPR, D.C. National Guard Maj. Adam DeMarco said he was copied on an email from the Provost Marshal of Joint Force Headquarte­rs National Capital Region who was seeking two things: A device called the Active Denial System, or ADS and a Long-Range Acoustic Device, known as the LRAD.

ADS is a weapon designed by the military that uses short radio waves that “provides a sensation of intense heat on the surface of the skin,” according to the written statements. This causes an intense burning feeling, leading to the tool also being called a “heat ray” or the “Pain Ray.”

According to DeMarco, the email stated the lead military police officers were interested in the ADS as it could “immediatel­y compel an individual to cease threatenin­g behavior” and that the “effect is overwhelmi­ng, causing

an immediate repel response by the targeted individual.”

Developed by the military as a crowd dispersal tool decades ago, the ADS has largely been abandoned amid doubts about its effectiven­ess and ethical questions. The tool causes searing pain, but no actual physical damage.

This is not the first report of an ADS inquiry during the Trump era. Reports emerged in August that a few weeks before the 2018 midterms, as Trump was issuing warnings of caravans heading to the border, Customs and Border Protection raised the idea of deploying the weapon to officials at Homeland Security. It was shot down by Kirstjen Nielsen, then secretary of Homeland Security.

DeMarco additional­ly wrote that the provost marshal requested a long-range acoustic device that is frequently used to disperse crowds. The LRAD releases a piercing noise that allows a broadcast voice or recording to play at a deafening level, so people at the back can hear.

The LRAD is often used in such instances but was reportedly not used June 1. Protesters in Lafayette Square and near the White House said police gave little or no warning. NPR reported that by not using one, officers may have violated court-ordered regulation­s.

Under a 2015 settlement, federal police are now required to give large crowds several advance warnings to disperse, and those warnings must be loud enough to be heard from blocks away before aggressive tactics, such as chemical irritants, are used. The LRAD would have achieved this.

Constituti­onal rights attorney Mara Verheyden-Hilliard, who filed a lawsuit that led to the 2015 guidelines, said, “There is zero evidence that there were any officers who can testify that they were in the farthest reaches of the crowd.”

“There has to be documentat­ion that the notice was given multiple times, and there are supposed to be recordings made that the notice was given,” she continued. “We wrote all these in specifical­ly for this reason. In fact, unfortunat­ely, it would appear in anticipati­on of what happened in Lafayette Park,”

Gregory Monahan, acting chief of U.S. Park Police, told lawmakers in July his officers abided by rules of the agreement: “The protocol was followed.”

DeMarco wrote to the committee that he responded about a half hour later after receiving the email that “the D.C. National Guard was not in possession of either an LRAD or an ADS.” Providing his account as a whistleblo­wer, DeMarco was the senior-most D.C. National Guard officer on the ground that day, serving as a liaison between the National Guard and U.S. Park Police.

DeMarco’s account contradict­s the Trump administra­tion’s claims that the protesters were being violent, which prompted the clearing.

The Trump administra­tion has denied any connection between the photo op and the clearing of protesters and has denied the use of tear gas.

 ?? HANNAH GABER/USA TODAY ?? The military-developed ADS has been largely abandoned amid doubts about its effectiven­ess and ethical questions.
HANNAH GABER/USA TODAY The military-developed ADS has been largely abandoned amid doubts about its effectiven­ess and ethical questions.

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