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		Police test 'Spider-Man' device as alternative to Taser
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		[September 18, 2019]  By 
		Omar Younis
 LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - With 49 people 
		killed last year after being shocked by Tasers, police departments 
		across the United States are trying out a "Spider-Man"-like device that 
		fires a tether that entangles and restrains the suspect.
 
 Called Bolawrap, the device fires an eight-foot (2.4 meters) bola-style 
		tether at a suspect to entangle his legs and prevent him from getting 
		away. It works at a range of 10-25 ft (3-7.6 meters).
 
 "Whether it is a Taser, pepper spray, baton ... there's been this gap 
		created by the courts requiring that a higher level of force be used at 
		the appropriate time," said Tom Smith, president of Wrap Industries, 
		which manufactures the Bolawrap device.
 
 "This tool fits perfectly into that gap giving the officers another 
		option to use before having to use that high level of force to end that 
		conversation very early, very safely," he said.
 
 Smith, who founded TASER International, now Axon Enterprises, made the 
		Taser with his brother before leaving to join Wrap Technologies. He said 
		he saw the success of the Taser as proof there was an appetite for more 
		non-lethal tools in policing.
 
 The Bolawrap is a little bit larger than a cell phone and designed to 
		fit easily onto a police belt. The synthetic fiber tether exits the 
		device at about 640 feet (about 200 meters) per second "And that is... 
		you won't see it," Smith said.
 
 He said he has demonstrated the device to dozens of police departments 
		in the United States, as well as in Australia and New Zealand.
 
 
		
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			Trainer Michael Harding points a laser-guided new non-lethal weapon 
			by BolaWrap, that discharges an 8 foot bola style Kevlar tether at 
			640 feet per second to entangle a subject at a range of 10-25 feet, 
			during training in Laguna Niguel, California, U.S., September 5, 
			2019. Picture taken September 5, 2019. REUTERS/Mike Blake 
            
			 
Reuters has documented a total of at least 1,081 U.S. deaths following use of 
police Tasers, almost all since the weapons entered widespread use in the early 
2000s, including 49 in 2018. In many of those cases, the Taser was combined with 
other force, such as hand strikes, pepper spray or restraint holds.
 In the city of Bell, Calif., southeast of Los Angeles, Police Chief Carlos Islas 
said he tried out the device on himself.
 
 "I personally went ahead and took the opportunity to get wrapped myself and the 
reason I did that - it is important for me to understand what an individual who 
is going to get wrapped is going to feel, and to me it's very negligible.
 
 "I mean there was no pain," he said.
 
 (The story corrects name of company in third paragraph)
 
 (Reporting by Omar Younis; writing by Bill Tarrant; Editing by Dan Grebler)
 
				 
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