BolaWrap: LA police to use 'Batman-style' device to snare suspects

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Media playback is unsupported on your deviceMedia captionThe BolaWrap is designed to fire a tether that entangles a personTwo hundred Los
Angeles police officers will be trained to use a new gadget designed to snare a person by wrapping them in a cord, officials say.The
BolaWrap, recently adopted by several other forces, fires a cord that can entangle an individual's torso or legs from up to 25ft (8m)
away.The tether is intended to restrict the person's movement, allowing officers to take action without using force.But civil rights
activists have raised concerns over its potential usage.Three devices will be carried by officers in the southern Californian city as part
of a 90-day trial starting in January.A total of 200 Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) officers will be given the devices after training,
the force said."If you deploy a wrap tool, it buys time for officers to deploy a secondary option," Bell Police Chief Carlos Islas said,
according to the LA Times
"It will inevitably restrain someone
It's a tool that's been a long time coming."Image copyrightWrap TechnologiesImage caption The BolaWrap, pictured here,
is designed to entangle an individual in a cord, restricting their movement Image copyrightWrap TechnologiesImage caption
The BolaWrap is being used by police forces across the US as a non-lethal tool to restrain individuals Mr
Islas says the device will only be used in specific circumstances, including cases when individuals are suffering from mental health issues
It is one of many tools used by officers and may not work in every situation, Mr Islas says.Officers across the country face scrutiny for
their use of force on unarmed individuals.John Raphling, a senior researcher at Human Rights Watch, told the TheIndianSubcontinent that the
deployment of BolaWraps could lead to abuse."Tools like these create the illusion that police enforcement is going to be less violent," said
Mr Ralphing
"The reality is that - as we've seen with tasers and other less lethal weapons - they will be used to expand police violence."Rather than
giving more power to police, we should be rethinking what the role of police is in our country."Discussing the tool at a meeting with LA
police, Adam Smith, member of Black Lives Matter, an activist movement, said it would probably be used mostly in minority communities, the
LA Times reports.What is the device?Wrap Technologies, the company that makes the gun-like gadget, describes it as "a hand-held remote
restraint device that discharges an 8ft bola style Kevlar tether".At the end of the tether - fired at 513ft per second - are two small barbs
that attach to a person when they make contact.Image copyrightWrap TechnologiesImage caption The BolaWrap can entangle
an individual's torso or legs from up to 7m (25ft) away, its maker says "Suspects are restrained with minimal to no pain,
while also enabling officers to swarm and investigate the situation," the company says on its website.Who already uses the device?Several
police forces, including Fresno in California and Hendersonville in North Carolina, have been training their officers to use the BolaWrap on
the streets.In October, a Fresno police officer used a BolaWrap gun to apprehend a man who had stabbed two people with a kitchen knife.Image
copyrightWrap TechnologiesImage caption A promotional shot showing how the BolaWrap can constrict a person's legs with
its cord Last month, Santa Cruz Sheriff's Office said it had bought 20 BolaWrap devices it hoped would prove to be "another
less-lethal force option to their tool-belt".In US media, the gun-like device has been likened to a gadget used by comic book superhero
Batman, who prefers non-lethal means when fighting crime.What other new technologies are police using? The device is one of several recent
examples of police forces in the US testing new technologies for law enforcement purposes.Last month, Massachusetts State Police said it was
using remote robot dogs to keep officers out of harm's way in potentially dangerous situations.A spokesman for the force said the robot,
made by Boston Dynamics, was "a valuable tool for law enforcement because of its ability to provide situational awareness of potentially
dangerous environments".The American Civil Liberties Union, a rights group, asked the force to explain how the robots were being used,
raising concerns over transparency and potential racial injustice.