USA TODAY International Edition

Lethal risks

Rubber bullets can kill or maim for life, evidence shows.

- Liz Szabo

In cities across the country, police department­s have tried to quell unrest spurred by the death of George Floyd by firing rubber bullets into crowds, even though five decades of evidence shows such weapons can disable, disfigure and even kill.

In addition to rubber bullets – which often have a metal core – police have used tear gas, flash- bang grenades, pepper spray and projectile­s to control crowds of demonstrat­ors demanding justice for 46- year- old George Floyd, who died after a Minneapoli­s police officer knelt on his neck while other officers restrained his body. Some peaceful demonstrat­ions have turned violent, with people smashing windows, setting buildings afire and looting stores.

The use of rubber bullets by police has provoked outrage as graphic images have flashed on social media showing people who have lost an eye or suffered other injuries after being hit.

A study published in 2017 in medical journal The BMJ found that 3% of people hit by rubber bullets died of the injury. Fifteen percent of the 1,984 people studied were permanentl­y injured by the rubber bullets, also known as “kinetic impact projectile­s.”

Rubber bullets should be used only to control “an extremely dangerous crowd,” said Brian Higgins, former police chief of Bergen County, New Jersey.

“Shooting them into open crowds is reckless and dangerous,” said Dr. Douglas Lazzaro, a professor and expert in eye trauma at NYU Langone Health.

In the past week, a grandmothe­r in La Mesa, California, was hospitaliz­ed in an intensive care unit after being hit between the eyes with a rubber bullet. Actor Kendrick Sampson said he was hit by rubber bullets seven times at a Los Angeles protest.

In Washington, D. C., the National Guard allegedly fired rubber bullets Monday to disperse peaceful protesters near a historic church where President Donald Trump was subsequent­ly photograph­ed.

In a statement, Attorney General William Barr defended the actions of local and federal law enforcemen­t officers in Washington, saying they had “made significant progress in restoring order to the nation’s capital.” Barr did not mention the use of tear gas or rubber bullets.

Freelance photograph­er Linda Tirado said she was blinded by a rubber bullet at a protest in Minneapoli­s.

In an email, Minneapoli­s Police Department spokesman John Elder said: “We use 40 mm less- lethal foam marking rounds. We do not use rubber bullets.”

Elder didn’t mention the brand name of the foam marking rounds used by Minneapoli­s police. But a website for the Direct Impact 40 mm OC Crushable Foam Round depicts a green, bulletshap­ed product described as a “pointof- aim, point- of- impact direct- fire round.” The site says the projectile­s are “an excellent solution whether you need to incapacita­te a single subject or control a crowd.”

It is not known how often police use rubber bullets or how many people are harmed every year, said Dr. Rohini Haar, a lecturer at the University of California- Berkeley School of Public Health and medical expert with Physicians for Human Rights. Many victims don’t go to the hospital.

Police are not required to document their use of rubber bullets, so there is no national data to show how often they’re used, said Higgins, now an adjunct professor at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York. There are no nationally agreed- upon standards for their use.

When aimed at the legs, rubber bullets can stop a dangerous person or crowd from getting closer to a police officer, Lazzaro said. But when fired at close range, they can penetrate the skin, break bones, fracture the skull and explode the eyeball, he said. Rubber bullets can cause traumatic brain injuries and “serious abdominal injury, including injuries to the spleen and bowel along with major blood vessels,” said Dr. Robert Glatter, an emergency physician in New York City and a spokesman for the American College of Emergency Physicians.

Physicians for Human Rights, a nonprofit advocacy group based in New York, has called for rubber bullets to be banned.

The British military developed rubber bullets 50 years ago to control nationalis­t rioters in Northern Ireland, although the United Kingdom stopped using them decades ago.

Many “less than lethal” police weapons can cause serious harm, according to Physicians for Human Rights.

Rubber bullets are less harmful than subduing people by “physical force or regular bullets,” Mell said. “But we’re firing a lot more of them this week than we usually do.”

 ??  ?? An Austin, Texas, police officer aims a weapon with rubber bullets into a crowd of protesters calling for justice after the death of George Floyd. LOLA GOMEZ/ AP
An Austin, Texas, police officer aims a weapon with rubber bullets into a crowd of protesters calling for justice after the death of George Floyd. LOLA GOMEZ/ AP

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