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Police use acoustic warfare to disperse crowds

Police ordered protesters to disperse at the Group of 20 summit last week with a device that can beam earsplitting alarm tones and verbal instructions that the manufacturer likens to a "spotlight of sound," but that legal groups called potentially dangerous.

Updated on: Oct 1, 2009, 21:24:32 IST
AP | By , Pittsburgh
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Police ordered protesters to disperse at the Group of 20 summit last week with a device that can beam earsplitting alarm tones and verbal instructions that the manufacturer likens to a "spotlight of sound," but that legal groups called potentially dangerous.

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The device, called a Long Range Acoustic Device, concentrates voice commands and a car alarm-like sound in a 30- or 60-degree cone that can be heard nearly two miles away.

It is about two feet square and mounted on a swivel such that one person can point it where it's needed. The volume measures 140-150 decibels 3 feet (1 meter) away, louder than a jet engine, but dissipates with distance.

Robert Putnam, spokesman for the manufacturer, San Diego-based American Technology Corp, said it's "like a big spotlight of sound that you can shine on people."

"It's not a sonic cannon. It's not the death ray or anything like that," Putnam said.

"It's about long-range communications being heard intelligibly."

During the Pittsburgh protests, police used the device to order demonstrators to disperse and to play a high-pitched "deterrent tone" designed to drive people away. It was the first time the device was used in a riot-control situation on US soil, according to American Technology and police.

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