rawstory | Shay Horse, an independent photojournalist who was on the scene,
posted on the internet that “The NYPD began using it after glass bottles
were thrown at them when they made several violent arrests when a march
tried to cross Madison Ave.”
One person who was present at the scene, Moth Dust, a photographer,
said people became aggravated after the LRAD was used and began throwing
trash and rocks in the direction of police. She said she was affected
by the sound waves.
“I thought I was fine until I realized I was getting dizzy and migraine was spreading to all over my face,” she said.
LRADs were used in the first days of unrest in Ferguson Missouri, and
have been used by police at protests throughout the world. They were
developed by the US military after an insurgent attack on the US.S. Cole
in Yemen in 2000, and were used by the NYPD against Occupy Wall Street
protesters.
According to Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty,
“The LRAD can reach decibel levels as high as 162. For comparison, a
normal conversation is usually 60 decibels, while a lawn mower can reach
to 90 decibels. A level of 130 decibels is typically considered the
average pain threshold for most humans.”
Furthermore, Informed Health Online notes that a jet engine registers
at about 140 decibels. Anything at or above this range, IHO explains,
“is called acoustic trauma. Depending on how long the ears are exposed
to the sound and how intense it is, it may damage the eardrum, the
middle ear and/or the inner ear. Damage like this is usually temporary,
but some hearing loss may remain.”
The head investor and media relations for the LRAD Corporation in San
Diego, California, told Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty that the weapon
is so precise that those “standing behind or next to” the device can
hardly hear it. However, the YouTube footage shows dozens of people
scurrying away from the sound blasts, which can be heard clearly on
film.
No coverage of the LRAD use was reported in the mainstream media.
Earlier in the night, around 11 PM, CNN correspondent Brooke Baldwin
praised the behavior of protesters and the NYPD’s response to the
protests, remarking on live television, “This is exactly how it’s
supposed to be.”
Noel Leader, a former 20 year sergeant of the NYPD and co-founder of
100 Blacks in Law Enforcement Who Care, was incredulous about the
possibility that an LRAD had been used.
“I haven’t heard anything about that,” he told AlterNet. “I’d be
surprised if that was the case, because most of the protesters have been
nonviolent and peaceful, even though they have been disruptive.
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