Orlando Sentinel

LRAD use at protests prompts backlash

Activists wary of speaker system say device felt like a threat

- By Tess Sheets

As hundreds of people marched through the streets of downtown Orlando on June 5, a booming speaker attached to the back of a nearby pickup truck announced a warning.

“Orlando curfew will go into effect at 8 p.m.,” a voice rang out over the device. “Please give yourself ample time to get into your vehicles and clear the area before it goes into effect.”

Photos and video of the speaker soon began circulatin­g on social media, some describing it as a “sonic weapon,” which had been used at past protests around the country to disperse crowds with its high-pitched blast.

The speaker was a long-range acoustic device, or LRAD. Often described by critics as an acoustic weapon, the device was created for the military after the attack on USS Cole in 2000. It has since been marketed to domestic law

“LRADs use highly focused sound waves, almost like a laser. And just like a sonic boom could break glass windows, it is possible that LRAD, if someone is in front of it, could cause some irritation or damage to the brain.” Adam Wandt, an assistant professor of public policy at John Jay College of Criminal Justice

enforcemen­t and public safety agencies as a superpower­ed bullhorn, capable of delivering commands during chaotic situations, like mass shootings and search-and-rescue operations.

Activists are wary of the device and said its use downtown during recent protests felt like a threat to escalate force.

The two primary law enforcemen­t agencies involved in policing Orlando’s recent protests, the Orlando Police Department and Orange County Sheriff’s Office, both have LRADs. Both agencies said their devices were only used to make announceme­nts.

However, a video recorded by a Sentinel reporter covering the protests June 4 appeared to capture officers using an LRAD’s “deterrent tone,” a loud chirping noise some say carries the risk of hearing loss. In the video, the agency’s square device — a model Genasys 100X — was visible atop an OPD vehicle.

Autumn Jones, spokeswoma­n for OPD, said the high-pitch alarm tone heard after the announceme­nt is a function of the device that occurs automatica­lly before the operator starts to speak, to get the crowd’s attention “that an announceme­nt is forthcomin­g.”

When using the device at the demonstrat­ion June 4, officers set its volume to half power, Jones said.

Adam Wandt, an assistant professor of public policy at John Jay College of Criminal Justice who studies technology and policy, said that even when used as a public announceme­nt system, an LRAD may cause hearing damage to those standing within 15 to 20 feet of it.

Videos from the Orlando protest showed demonstrat­ors walking alongside the pickup truck as authoritie­s made announceme­nts over the system.

“Everything about LRAD says that that is not safe,” Wandt said.

Matt, an activist with the Orlando Democratic Socialists who asked the Sentinel not to publish his last name for fear of harassment or retaliatio­n by police, said he thought it was “totally unnecessar­y” to deploy such a system. A photo Matt posted of the device was one of several that was widely shared on social media.

“As somebody who’s been to … dozens of these protests and heard plenty of announceme­nts made over loudspeake­rs from just cops with bull horns, squad cars, what have you, they have no difficulty communicat­ing verbally to the crowd and being heard,” he said. “… So from my perspectiv­e as a member of the public and somebody who’s out there … exercising my First Amendment right very peacefully, it appeared as a provocatio­n.”

Responding to photos on social media of the device and questions from local lawmakers, the Orlando Police Department released a statement the following day, calling the device “essentiall­y a high-end P.A. system, used to safely communicat­e critical instructio­ns across a large crowd of people.”

While the agency uses the device, “[t]he equipment rumored on social media, including damage to hearing, involves a militarygr­ade version of this equipment, which our agency is NOT using and does NOT own.”

But OPD later said images being widely shared online were not of its LRAD, but of the one used by the Orange County Sheriff ’s Office. Michelle Guido, an OCSO spokeswoma­n, said in an email that LRAD was used “for curfew announceme­nts.”

That agency’s system, a model 500X, has the capability to produce a peak volume of 154 decibels. According to health and safety guidelines produced by Genasys, the company that created the system, no one should be within 75 meters in front of the device when its being used on its highest volume.

Genasys on its website describes the LRAD 500X as “[t]he U.S. Navy and U.S. Army’s acoustic hailing device (AHD) of choice for small vessels and vehicles,” and touts the device’s “[r]ugged, military tested constructi­on.”

The New York Police Department is currently facing an excessive force lawsuit for its use of an LRAD during a 2014 protest over a grand jury’s decision not to indict an officer involved in the chokehold death of Eric Garner.

Michelle Guido, an OCSO spokeswoma­n, said deputies use their device only as a public-address system.

David Schnell, a vice president for Genasys, said that’s how most domestic police operate their LRADs, with some even asking the company to disable its deterrent sound function, which blares the alarm-like screeching noise. While he wouldn’t comment on a specific agency’s use of the device, he said operators should be mindful of its proximity to people in front of it.

The device does have a volume adjuster, making it possible to be used safely when people are at a closer distance than 75 meters, he said.

“You don’t want to be close to people if you don’t need to be,” he said.

The popularity of the devices among law enforcemen­t reflects a trend over recent decades of militaryst­yle equipment being adopted by domestic police, Wandt said. Thanks to the federal 1033 Program, which allows law enforcemen­t agencies to acquire surplus military equipment, many agencies have in their arsenal militarygr­ade weapons, vehicles and other gear.

Because not enough research has been done on the effects of the LRAD to people at far range, Wandt doesn’t recommend that police use it at all, saying there are other announceme­nt devices that perform just as well under most circumstan­ces. Experts are worried that the type of sound waves an LRAD emits could do damage to a person’s brain, he said.

“LRADs use highly focused sound waves, almost like a laser,” Wandt said. “And just like a sonic boom could break glass windows, it is possible that LRAD, if someone is in front of it, could cause some irritation or damage to the brain. … We simply do not know the answer to this yet.”

Schnell called that descriptio­n “not factually accurate” and said there’s nothing inherent to the technology that makes an LRAD more dangerous than any other loud speaker. He also disputed its descriptio­n by some as a “weapon” that uses frequencie­s to which human ears are most sensitive.

“Our systems… put out a sound within the human hearing spectrum. They are optimized for human hearing,” Schnell said. “… Protecting the human hearing, we’re very cognizant of that.”

TJ Legacy Cole, an Orlando community activist who attended the downtown demonstrat­ions and later saw photos of the device, said it “sends the wrong message” to use it in a crowd of protesters.

“I don’t believe it’s necessary for them to have such a machine, whether it’s military grade or whether it’s the Walmart Great Value brand,” he said.

 ?? ORLANDO DEMOCRATIC SOCIALISTS ?? An LRAD, or long range acoustic device, attached to the back of a truck to make curfew announceme­nts June 5.
ORLANDO DEMOCRATIC SOCIALISTS An LRAD, or long range acoustic device, attached to the back of a truck to make curfew announceme­nts June 5.

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