https://www.popularmechanics.com/military/weapons/a34059879/military-police-wanted-heat-ray-weapon-protesters-how-it-works/

   
   - The federal government asked the Washington, D.C. National Guard if it had 
nonlethal weapons to use during this summer's protests in our nation's capital, 
according to an NPR report.
   - The Active Denial System (ADS) produces scalding heat, while the Long 
Range Acoustic Device (LRAD) bombards targets with painful, intense sound.
   - The weapons, although specifically designed not to kill or permanently 
injure, would have been a huge escalation of the protests. Some have described 
them as “too scary to use.”
   

The U.S. government sought to have two scary, albeit non-lethal weapons on hand 
during this summer’s protests in Washington, D.C., according to an NPR report.


The Long Range Acoustic Device (LRAD) and Active Denial System (ADS) are 
designed to produce instantaneous pain, causing crowds to disperse and allowing 
authorities to reimpose order. Experts, however, claim the weapons are “too 
scary to use,” and people can become too incapacitated to move out of the pain 
zone.


U.S. military authorities asked the District of Columbia National Guard if it 
had the LRAD and ADS in its inventory, but it did not. The authorities made the 
request on June 1, 2020, the same day armored police tear-gassed protestors in 
Lafayette Square—described by a Guard officer as “peaceful”—to clear the way 
for President Donald Trump's photo opportunity in front of a church.

Guardsmen were on hand for the protests, but were not armed with weapons. Two 
Guard helicopters, however, flew low over protesters in an attempt to disperse 
them.






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