New, Non-lethal Technologies Offer More Options to Police
by Robert Hausman


Technological advances in today's average police arsenal have generally not kept pace with other developments in society. In an age that has seen the advent of jet travel, outer space exploration, miraculous medical discoveries and the personal computer, many of today's crime fighters are still heavily reliant on the 19th century gun-and-stick technology of Wyatt Earp.

While technology in and of itself will not solve the crime problem, emerging new technologies offer law enforcement more options to the use of deadly force, operational efficiencies and greater safety for themselves and the public.

Today's law enforcement market is highly diverse, and comprises nearly three million potential customers from police departments, correctional facilities, private security firms and fire departments, according to the US Department of Justice's Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS) and the US Bureau of the Census. There are about 860,000 police officers in 17,000 departments throughout the country, according to the National Institute of Justice (NIJ).

Most police departments are small; only two departments have more than 8,000 officers (New York City and Los Angeles), 90% have fewer than 25 officers, and 50% have less than 12 officers. Each of these agencies have different equipment requirements. Thus, the market is thought by analysts to be large enough to sustain an industry, but too small to produce the kind of sales revenue to support the research and development base needed to create the new products necessary for it.



Enter Uncle Sam

While the fragmented nature of the police market has stifled the development of products designed solely for law enforcement end-users, the end of the Cold War has also brought about an unprecedented opportunity to apply to the needs of today's lawmen and women some of the technologies developed for the military. A five-year partnership was recently announced between the US Departments of Defense and Justice, to jointly share and develop technologies of value to both the police and military operations "other than war."

Last fall, the pilot National Law Enforcement Technology Center (NLETC) opened in Rockville, MD. The center, a program of the NIJ, is responsible for facilitating the identification, development, manufacture, and adoption of new products and technologies designed for law enforcement and criminal justice uses.

The center encompasses a technology information demonstration facility, and will compile information on manufacturer and product identification to allow those agencies seeking a particular product to obtain a comprehensive list of manufacturers. It will also help facilitate exchanges of product data, enabling agencies considering the purchase of a particular product to get in touch with another agency that is already using the device, to provide evaluation data on how well the item functioned.

The center also provides technical assistance to help police departments locate equipment available for loan or lease from another agency, and to locate experts in various fields for technical advice. The Rockville center is the first of what is envisioned to be a nationwide network of regional centers providing such information and resources.



Past Gov't. Efforts

In an unusually frank statement on the failure of big government largess, anti-gun Rep. Patricia Schroeder (D-CO) described as a "disaster" previous federal efforts to transfer technology to local departments through the ill-fated Law Enforcement Assistance Administration, in an address during the Law Enforcement Technology for the 21st Century conference, held last June in Washington, DC.

"The federal government," Schroeder admitted, "threw money out all over America . . . it wasn't coordinated, it wasn't operable, nobody really knew what they were buying, everybody got fancy new light bars for their police cars. . . That's why we're trying to do it differently this time."

By creating the partnership between the Departments of Defense and Justice, it is hoped that funding will not be just splattered around, and that local law enforcement agencies will not be told to "just go buy something."



Current NIJ Projects

With the US military increasingly engaging in peacekeeping missions abroad, there is a growing similarity between the various technologies of interest to the military and domestic police. Identifying persons illegally carrying firearms, the safe restraint of individuals and quickly but safely stopping a fleeing vehicle are examples.

Some of the current NIJ research projects include: improved security systems for prisons; concealed weapons/contraband detection technologies; tracking systems for use in the monitoring of suspects or persons on parole; surveillance technologies; illicit substance detection systems; digital information systems; GPS/GIS technologies (Global Positioning Systems/Geographic Information Systems); better methods of DNA identification; improved fingerprinting technologies; and, a less-than-lethal means to subdue suspects without injury.

The Office of Law Enforcement Technology Commercialization (OLETC) located at Wheeling Jesuit College, Wheeling, WV, is actively involved in commercializing law enforcement technology developed in the federal laboratory system. The OLETC is charged with assessing the needs of law enforcement agencies, approaching the research and development community regarding the development of suitable new technologies and to assist in prototyping and commercialization processes. Examples of projects that the OLETC is currently working on with federal labs and private companies include: a disabling net and launcher system that deploys a lightweight net to capture escaping suspects, which is primarily of interest to correctional institutions; and, a pepper spray launcher/dispenser to be used in hostage situations.



Sniper Detection

The Lawrence Livermore National Laboratories of Livermore, CA, has developed a portable anti-sniper detection device called the Lifeguard System. It is said to have the capability of tracking bullets in flight and displaying the flight track to an operator, who can then pinpoint the source of fire within hundredths of a second and engage the sniper with a variety of response devices.

A special camera is used to detect the gunfire; a computer then plots the trajectory of each bullet fired and a positioner device (employing a camera with telescopic lens and spotlight) points back at the sniper and has the capability of firing back at the sniper with a lethal or nonlethal projectile.

"We think the potential is there for Lifeguard to have a revolutionary impact on crime prevention," said Tom Karr, head of the Livermore team that developed the device. "Anybody who shoots at you from any direction would be immediately located. The aggressor can no longer hide."

Lifeguard's key components include a sensor that identifies a moving bullet through its unique signals and a computer that processes the signals into an image. During a recent demonstration, the equivalent of an M-16 rifle was fired at a target. The sensor spotted the bullets, while Lifeguard's video screen recreated each bullet's flight path back to its source. A small red rectangle on the computer screen outlined the area where the "sniper" stood.

Potential applications include attaching the device on police helicopters, VIP protection details, use in high-crime neighborhoods, and providing security at large gatherings.



Secures System

A $2 million grant from the Defense Department's Advanced Research Projects Agency is funding the development of yet another gunfire detection system. Called SECURES (System for the Effective Control of Urban Environmental Security), it employs acoustic sensors to detect, recognize and pinpoint the location of gunfire. Successful testing of the system has reportedly been completed by the FBI and the Metropolitan Police Department of Washington, DC.

SECURES' main component is a battery-powered two-square-inch device that can be mounted on utility poles or buildings. The device "listens" for and detects the unique audio characteristics of gunfire, and can immediately notify local police. The developer, Alliant Techsystems Inc., of Minneapolis, MN, adapted the system from its work in submarine detection technology performed for the US Navy. The NIJ is reported to be planning an independent test and evaluation of the technology.



Other Devices

The Department of Justice, through the NIJ, is helping to fund three different technologies for the detection of concealed weapons and contraband.

The first, a passive imaging technology development by Millitech Corp., of South Deerfield, MA, is claimed to offer rapid and remote detection of metallic and nonmetallic weapons, plastic explosives, and drugs concealed under multiple layers of clothing without the need for a direct physical search.

Passive imaging is based on existing natural emissions from the objects, and is said to be harmless to the subject. An image of the subject is reproduced on a monitor, based on the differences in emissivity of the human body, compared to the emissivity of a metallic object. A camera system, employing the concealed arms detection technology and suitable for use from a police vehicle, is also under development.

A second concealed arms detection system based on low-frequency electromagnetic radiation is under development by the Raytheon Co. It is said to have a low probability of false alarms and does not require a subject to walk through a portal equipped with a magnetic sensor. Its unobtrusive operational characteristics would not make a person under surveillance aware of the monitoring.

And thirdly, the Idaho National Engineering Laboratory (INEL), of Idaho Falls, ID, is developing a scanner that can be used as a stand- alone unit or directly incorporated into hallways and doorways of buildings to detect ferro-magnetic objects. It utilizes an existing technology used in mineral exploration, military navigation and submarine detection, which is based on a passive sampling of the earth's magnetic field. Local aberrations in the magnetic field produced by ferro-magnetic objects such as guns and knives can be measured and detected by sensitive magnetometers.

The NIJ's Law Enforcement Technology Center in Rome, NY, will be funded to provide technical and engineering support for the management of these concealed arms detection systems.



Other Projects

INEL has also developed a backseat air bag to control unruly suspects in police cars. The air bag restraint is intended to curtail the violent actions which sometimes occur when arrested persons are placed in the back seats of police cars. The air bag restraint is intended to reduce the seriousness of property damage to the vehicle, self- inflicted injury to the transported person and assault on the officer.

The bag, which is contained in the vehicle's trunk, is activated by a button on the dashboard and uses a low volume of air pressure to inflate the bag and disable the suspect without injury or danger of suffocation. It is designed for installation in existing patrol vehicles with cages to allow continued use of current vehicle resources.

INEL has designed a retractable spiked barrier strip for stopping fleeing vehicles, as well. The strip can place its spikes in either the active (vertical) or passive (horizontal) positions, allowing law enforcement personnel to lay the unobtrusive-looking strip across a road far in advance of the approach of a fleeing vehicle. No damage is said to occur to passing vehicles until the spikes are activated, which can be done at some distance.



Non-lethal Devices

Meanwhile, the Oak Ridge National Laboratory of Oak Ridge, TN, is reportedly working on less-than-lethal technologies to temporarily disable fleeing or unruly suspects. One device is a thermal gun which can raise a person's body temperature to 105 or 107 degrees, thereby simulating a disabling fever.

Another project utilizes electromagnetics to induce a subject to go into an epileptic fit. And a third device being developed by Oak Ridge uses magnetic phosbeams to affect the retina of the eye to make a subject groggy and disoriented, as if struck over the head.

A variety of non-lethal nets that can be hand-deployed or fired from 37mm or 40mm grenade launchers are being developed by Foster-Miller Inc. of Waltham, MA. The anti-personnel system consists of three versions: Sticky Net, a net containing a nontoxic adhesive coating making escape nearly impossible; Snare Net, a personnel entanglement net; and Sting Net, which employs a high-voltage pulse generator to quickly immobilize armed combatants and other highly dangerous individuals.

Airport travelers may soon have to undergo holographic imaging by security personnel in which a computer-generated image of their bodies will appear on a monitor screen. This technology can actually see through clothing and show the contrast between the body and the outlines of unnatural objects that the subject may be carrying. The holographic imaging technology is under development by the Pacific Northwest Lab of Richland, WA, at the request of the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA).



Captions

The Silver Shroud vehicle disabling net from Foster Miller Technology Developers, shown being deployed on an automobile.

Millitech Corp. of South Deerfield, MA, is currently developing a passive millimeter wave system for use in detecting concealed contraband.

An air bag has been designed by the Idaho National Engineering Laboratory of Idaho Falls, ID, for use in existing police vehicles that can restrain an individual if he or she becomes violent. The device is said to prevent self-injury and protect the vehicle and officer. The developers add that the device does not pose a suffocation hazard, and it can be quickly and easily inflated or deflated by an officer from the front seat. The bag is said to be ready for field testing. (Photo courtesy of the Idaho National Engineering Laboratory.)

Sticky Foam, an extremely tacky and tenacious material, can be used to entangle and immobilize an individual as an alternative to the use of deadly force by police. It is being developed by the Sandia National Laboratories of Albuquerque, NM.

The Lifeguard sniper detection system, under development by the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratories of Livermore, CA, can be employed in urban settings to detect sources of gunfire.