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Incapacitating Chemical Agents: Coming Soon To Local Law Enforcement? 152

Lasrick writes To this day, Russian authorities refuse to disclose the incapacitating chemical agent (ICA) they employed in their attempt, 12 years ago, to save 900 hostages held in a theater by Chechen fighters. Malcom Dando elaborates on a new report (PDF) that Russia, China, Israel, and a slew of other countries are continuing research into ICAs, and the apparent indifference of the international community into such research. Proponents of ICAs have long promoted their use in a variety of scenarios, including that of law enforcement, because in theory these chemicals incapacitate without permanent disability. Critics, however, point out that these weapons rely on exact dosage to prevent fatality, and that the ability to 'deliver the right agent to the right people in the right dose without exposing the wrong people, or delivering the wrong dose' is a near-impossible expectation. ICAs represent the further misuse and militarization of the life sciences and a weakening of the taboo against the weaponization of toxic substances, and the idea that they could be used in law enforcement situations is a disturbing one."
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Incapacitating Chemical Agents: Coming Soon To Local Law Enforcement?

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  • Fentanyl (Score:3, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday October 24, 2014 @02:46AM (#48219007)

    Isn't it common knowledge that the chemical they used was Fentanyl? A very powerful synthetic opiate. And isn't it also well known that a significant percentage of the hostages died as a result?

    So much for 'incapacitate without permanent disability.' Another overkill weapon in the untrained hands of local law enforcement. Yay.

    • by j35ter ( 895427 )

      Well, the Russian government was not forced to pay any reimbursements for the survivors, as there were no physical disabilities as the result of using the agent on them.

      TL;DR, dead people don't count as disabilities

      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        by stephanruby ( 542433 )

        Well, the Russian government was not forced to pay any reimbursements for the survivors, as there were no physical disabilities as the result of using the agent on them.

        dead people don't count as disabilities

        To be fair, Putin might have changed that in 2013.

        Now in Russia, the immediate families of terrorists are financially liable for the damages their family members caused [rt.com]. It's just too bad we don't have a law like that in the US, or the Bin Laden [wikipedia.org] family would have had Osama Bin Laden killed, or imprisoned, as a financial precaution for preserving its billions of dollars.

        • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

          by Kkloe ( 2751395 )
          with this law, if your third cousin that you have never met, doesnt even live in the same country, does some kind of shit then you wouldt mind paying for that?
        • by Anonymous Coward

          It's just too bad we don't have a law like that in the US, or the Bin Laden [wikipedia.org] family would have had Osama Bin Laden killed, or imprisoned, as a financial precaution for preserving its billions of dollars.

          Ah, hereditary guilt. It is practiced in North Korea.

          Well, some people still argue like that when they blame currently living Germans for things done by a previous generation. Then again, the same reasoning is used to argue for the extermination of all Jews since they are responsible for killing Jesus. (Never mind that Jesus was a Jew.)

          Hereditary guilt is a barbaric custom and regarding Osama, CIA had more to do with him going nuts when they gave him terrorist training, helped him built up al-Qaida and used

        • by N1AK ( 864906 )

          It's just too bad we don't have a law like that in the US

          Because you like it when the US goes full retard? Punishing people for the actions of their family members is stupid when Israel does it and it'd be equally stupid if America did it. There's no rational reason to restrict it to just terrorism offences, the only reason it would be is because people are completely irrational when it comes to terrorism.

          • There's no rational reason to restrict it to just terrorism offences

            And that right there is another argument against holding relatives accountable for the actions their family members take. Let's say today it is only applied to terrorism. A couple years down the road, someone shoots up a bunch of people and kills himself. There's a big push for his family to be held accountable (perhaps they are part of an unfavorably viewed minority) and they are. The next crime is less heinous but now there's a preced

            • by gweihir ( 88907 )

              The 3rd Reich was also doing this excessively. That is why the German Constitution has a specific, non-changeable, provision against it.

        • by gweihir ( 88907 )

          That is contrary to fundamental legal principles.

          • Whose fundamental legal principles? Do you misunderstand the concept of a sovereign nation? Each nation is different. And each nation has the right to be different, to the extent to which they can defend their difference with thermonuclear weapons. Or weaponised Ebola. Or their weapon(s) of choice.
      • In Putin's Russia, the survivors PAY Putin!
    • Re:Fentanyl (Score:4, Informative)

      by qbast ( 1265706 ) on Friday October 24, 2014 @02:53AM (#48219023)
      117 hostages died, nearly all of them because of gas poisoning: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/eur... [bbc.co.uk] . So, next time people start protesting, similar gas might be used to 'control' them. Doesn't it make you feel safer?
    • And wait for them to use that like some officer with its pepper spray against peaceful protesters, or some other officer tasing a student during a forum in an university for asking too much questions to a senator... Double yay.

    • by marsu_k ( 701360 )
      I thought so too. Nasty stuff, that - here in .fi, heroine is really quite rare. Opioid addicts usually use various synthetic opiates, and it seems almost without exception overdose deaths are caused by Fentanyl.
    • Yes, it was fentanyl. It kills by stopping the automatic breathing pattern. Victims suffocate.

      My wife is on a low dose of it for her back pain. She used to be on a much higher dosage, and on bad days, I didn't sleep at night. I had to stay awake to shake her every few minutes to get her breathing again. But it did make the pain go away.

  • by Tanuki64 ( 989726 ) on Friday October 24, 2014 @02:53AM (#48219019)

    US-Americans would NEVER do such things.

  • Until a proper stun setting is found, it must at least be given up to law enforcement to for researching non-lethal means of control. Even the recent events in Ferguson demonstrate the desperate need here. And perhaps, when lethal weapons are done away with those who don't belong in law enforcement will leave?

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Until a proper stun setting is found, it must at least be given up to law enforcement to for researching non-lethal means of control. Even the recent events in Ferguson demonstrate the desperate need here. And perhaps, when lethal weapons are done away with those who don't belong in law enforcement will leave?

      The argument for non-lethal weapons is that they can be used instead of lethal weapons. Unfortunately that isn't how they are being used now. Police use non-lethal weapons where it would never have been acceptable to use lethal weapons before.
      For example it would never be acceptable to shoot a person who argues about his constitutional rights with the police officer in a non-violent manner but refuses to back off but still police wouldn't hesitate to use a taser gun against such a person.
      Of course the polic

      • Non-lethal weapons would allow protestors to protest without getting killed. It is fair easier for a live person to argue their case in court than a corpse. The important thing here is to take away the governments ability to kill.

        • by khasim ( 1285 ) <brandioch.conner@gmail.com> on Friday October 24, 2014 @05:22AM (#48219361)

          Non-lethal weapons would allow protestors to protest without getting killed.

          Protestors should be able to protest WITHOUT the police using either lethal or non-lethal weapons against them.

          The important thing here is to take away the governments ability to kill.

          Except that you are not doing that.

          You are providing the police with pain-compliance (aka "torture") devices.

          And as can be seen in many news reports, once the police/government has them, they will use them. And that use will not be INSTEAD of more lethal options. They will be used when the victims do not IMMEDIATELY follow the orders of the police. Even if those orders are illegal to begin with.

          Those weapons will be treated as a "force multiplier". Not as a preferred option over lethal force.

          • by l0n3s0m3phr34k ( 2613107 ) on Friday October 24, 2014 @07:17AM (#48219731)
            We should be able to protest without a large police force always quickly descending on us. Police see protests like shooting galleries at a state fair and break out the riot gear and anti-mine vehicles as fast of possible. The best way for police to win is to not even show up unless looting or actual rioting happens. But guess what? You can't have a riot with only one side there! It's Art of War 101. It's easy to to turn a protest into a riot by showing up looking like an invasion force and screaming at everyone over bullhorns. When the PD does that, their still attacking first just via psychological means instead of physical. Once the general melee is going THEN the looters show up to take advantage of the chaos. The PD uses this as an escalation point, going after everyone including members of the press, teargassing citizens who are complying and staying inside...there must be a manual somewhere probably written by the CIA.
            • by Optic7 ( 688717 )

              Thanks for your insightful post. It makes sense and I agree, except that I understand from first hand accounts that sometimes protests and demonstrations attract people that are there expressly to get into fights with the police, so it's not always only AFTER the melee starts that they act. Sometimes these elements actively incite the conflicts. However, that doesn't take away from your point that the police showing up in riot gear is starting with an escalation.

              NPR had an article a few weeks back about exa

        • by DarkOx ( 621550 )

          The counter argument though is the non-lethal weapons lower the hurdle for use of weapons at all. Any cop knows the outcome of using his service pistol against someone is likely that someones death. Most cops being decent people don't WANT to kill people.

          Most cops however like all people value their own safety if you give them a tool like a taser and tell them it won't likely cause serious injury they become very likely to use it anytime the situation gets "tense" its the safe way out for them. They won'

  • Exact dosage is impossible, so how many civilian casualties are acceptable per knocked out assailant? Will you passively let people be killed by not using the gas, or actively kill a few to save more?

    I don't understand how this situation can be interesting enough to dedicate newspaper articles to it over and over. It never changes. The answers never change. People arguing that theirs is the only correct one never change. Maybe condemning the actions of others of a different ethical persuasion never gets old

  • Geneva Convention? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by spiritplumber ( 1944222 ) on Friday October 24, 2014 @04:13AM (#48219213) Homepage
    This stuff wouldn't be allowed in warfare, why is it allowed in use by civilian agencies?
    • by cdrudge ( 68377 )

      This stuff wouldn't be allowed in warfare, why is it allowed in use by civilian agencies?

      Because the Chemical Weapons Convention [opcw.org] explicitly allows it:

      9. "Purposes Not Prohibited Under this Convention" means
      ...
      (d) Law enforcement including domestic riot control purposes.

      My guess is that countries wanted to prohibit an opponent from using it on them (in case TPTB weren't prepared) but wanted to reserve the right to use it on citizens (when TPTB are prepared).

    • Warfare is a gentleman's sport between government elites, domestic enforcement is animal herding.
    • I was kinda wondering about that after the Branch Davidian incident in Waco, TX. Never got a satisfactory answer.
  • At what point do we decide that giving the ruling classes more and more technological weapons to use against its citizens is a sign that our system of government has failed ? i think that happened a while ago to be honest. If your government needs weapons to stay in power its not leadership its tyranny.

    I reject the assumption that the worlds need weapons to be safe , we need NO weapons to be truely safe.

  • VICTORIA SNELGROVE (Score:5, Informative)

    by pz ( 113803 ) on Friday October 24, 2014 @05:42AM (#48219435) Journal

    In 2004, VIctoria Snelgrove was hit in the eye with a pepper spray bullet by the Boston Police as part of crowd control (for a non-riotous crowd that was not responding to their commands). She subsequently died of her injury.

    Non-lethal ICA? No such thing.

    • by swb ( 14022 )

      They seem to have moved to the description "less lethal" when talking about weapons of this class, especially projectile weapons like pepper spray pellet guns and the "rubber" bullets used in extreme riot control circumstances.

    • Wait, do you mean to say someone DIED from GETTING SHOT IN THE EYE? What the fuck? That doesn't make any sense at all.

    • Look, even the summary above makes it clear that "lethality" is usually dose-dependent, and that dosage control is practically impossible in most real-world crowd-control situations. The Snelgrove tragedy is completely unrelated to that issue.

      Whether the police are shooting rounds of pepper spray, lead, VX, or candy-canes, if one of them enters your eye socket at high enough velocity, it's unlikely to be "non-lethal". Let's stay focused on the real issue here, the mythology of "non-lethal" chemical incapaci

      • by pz ( 113803 )

        It wasn't the chemicals, as you point out, but the penetrating object that killed her. She bled out. If she hadn't bled out, she would have likely suffered severe brain damage as skull and projectile fragments entered her cranium.

        The relevance being, also as you point out, that shooting anything into the face is a bad idea when non-lethality is the intent. But any chemical that is going to be delivered in such a way has exactly that potential, as do rubber bullets (have you seen what those do? non-letha

        • Doesn't matter. If that particular combination of payload and delivery system resulted in at least one human life ending prematurely, then by dictionary definition it's lethal.
        • by Reziac ( 43301 ) *

          My first thought was -- what if it hits a kid or small adult? I'd guess their dosage assumes a roughly 150 pound adult, because that way it'll stop the "more dangerous" persons. I guess anyone under the presumed body mass had better not get hit, eh?

  • by some old guy ( 674482 ) on Friday October 24, 2014 @06:12AM (#48219535)

    As the USA nears bottom in its slide toward becoming a complete corporatist police state, I see no surprises in any new "law enforcement tool". Hell, the cops have AFV's, drones, and crew-served weapons. Why not chem warfare, right?

    • Right. It really is interesting to see what the US has devolved into.

      What we are seeing is the US and China becoming more like each other:
      China turning into a consumerist, polluting, financial behemoth, while the CCP keeps control
      The US turning into a self-censoring, pseudo-police state.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Surely you meant MUSLIMS? Afraid to tell the truth? Who needs the truth, when we can lie about reality, and allow thousands more people to be killed by muslims?

  • Scary Stuff (Score:5, Interesting)

    by koan ( 80826 ) on Friday October 24, 2014 @07:49AM (#48219907)

    During the raid, all 40 of the attackers were killed, with no casualties among spetznas, but about 130 hostages died due to adverse reactions to the gas (including nine foreigners).[3] All but two of the hostages who died during the siege were killed by the toxic substance pumped into the theater to subdue the militants.[4][5] The use of the gas was widely condemned as heavy-handed, but the American and British governments deemed Russia's actions justifiable.[6] Physicians in Moscow condemned the refusal to disclose the identity of the gas that prevented them from saving more lives. Some reports said the drug naloxone was successfully used to save some hostages.[7]

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

    • Within days it was widely reported in both US and Russian media that the aerosol used was Fentanyl or some related/derivative agent.

      No, Russia has never said specifically what it was that they used, but I wouldn't expect any country to disclose the tools they use for anti-terror operations.

      • by koan ( 80826 )

        I recall that, makes sense if they used Naloxone to revive a few, hard to say what would have happened if they hadn't used the gas but the body count was far to high.

        The thing that troubles me is the Western governments acceptance of the use of it.

  • Research in this area is probably a good thing if done right. Mace, tear gas, and stun guns are not
    very effective in a large crowd or hostage situation. I agree with the article that current methods
    rely on exact dosage to prevent fatality but it's highly probable that we can find better chemicals that don't.
    Marijuana is one of many known substances where the effective dose and the lethal dose are orders of
    magnitude apart. Research into incapacitating substances with very low effective doses but very high

    • by Reziac ( 43301 ) *

      You could also quickly and easily negate any sort of protest... including protests against using chemical restraint on the public.

      Who are the "bad guys" is generally dependent on what laws you have and who enforces them. YOUR side won't always be in charge.

      • You could also quickly and easily negate any sort of protest... including protests against using chemical restraint on the public.

        Who are the "bad guys" is generally dependent on what laws you have and who enforces them. YOUR side won't always be in charge.

        Regardless of which side I was on, I would prefer something safer than the current solutions. Anything has the potential to be
        abused but that doesn't mean we should ban research on it just because of a potential. The bar is pretty low. It should be
        relatively easy to find something better than mace, tear gas, and mustard gas. Finding something safer would benefit you
        regardless of which side of the conflict you are one.

        • by Reziac ( 43301 ) *

          Safer is good (and more information via research is good too), but I think what will happen is more use against the public for more trivial reasons, because after all, it's "safe".

          Kinda like how pepper spray and tasers were safer than being shot, and LEOs became inclined to use them against the most trivial or even no resistance.

          • Unfortunately this is part of human nature. It's why many safety devices like child resistant medicine bottles
            don't actually give as good as result as they should. I've actually seen multiple different parents give their
            child a prescription pill bottle to play with as a rattle to keep them quiet. There are plenty of other safety devices
            like anti-lock brakes where changes in behavior negates most if not all of the gain in safety.

            • by Reziac ( 43301 ) *

              Yeah, I remember someone mentioned how requiring bicycle helmets correlates with an increase in serious car-vs-bike accidents, presumably because of the false sense of security (but also probably because it impacts peripheral vision -- we use that far more than we're consciously aware).

              Or as someone's sig says, "Safety is a tyrant's tool; no one can oppose safety."

              With enough such tools, it becomes possible to oppress the citizenry in complete "safety".

  • by addie ( 470476 ) on Friday October 24, 2014 @08:20AM (#48220071)

    "... their attempt, 12 years ago, to save 900 hostages held in a theater by Chechen fighters."

    In fact, 130 of those hostages died due to the gas. Is that a victory? Is that considered an effective tactic?

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Considering the shrapnel embedded in suicide belts (worn by the women terrorists) that could have gone off, that 130 could have been the whole 900, so most likely a net positive.

    • To the Russians....absolutely. The point of hostages is to prevent authorities from storming the building. The Russians tend to respond to this by saying: "Doesn't matter, we'll kill everyone if we have to, but we will make damned sure we kill you..."

      Makes hostage taking much less effective as a tactic.

      The Russians/USSR did the same thing to Arabs during the 70's/80's when taking hostages was the fad...

      So the story goes, some Soviet Diplomats were kidnapped in Lebanon. The Soviets send in an Alpha team,

  • Evolutionary pressure will tend to select for individuals who can survive and resist these agents.

    Five generations, maybe ten, and we'll have a sub-population of insurgents who drink incapacitant agents from breakfast.

  • by LeDopore ( 898286 ) on Friday October 24, 2014 @09:27AM (#48220643) Homepage Journal

    It calms people down, and since there are no THC receptors in the brainstem, high doses aren't life-threatening. You might need a lot of it though, and an unintended consequence may be that people would deliberately try to get police to use it on them.

  • The mysterious gas is Fentanyle, in gaseus form, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F... [wikipedia.org] .Fentanyle is 100 times more potent than morphine

    This particular Fentanyle has been manufactured and supplied by one pharmaceutical manufacturer in Kaunas, Lithuania, albeit prior to 1991. There were investigative journalists who have covered this topic exhaustively, in details several years ago.

    Fentanyle has been used in Nord Ost operation and it was not a success. Hundreds of hostages died from overdose and Russians do not

  • by nehumanuscrede ( 624750 ) on Friday October 24, 2014 @09:45AM (#48220943)
    My memory is probably lacking here. . . . but I thought the gas was a Fentanyl based one. A quick glance over at Wiki confirms my memory is still somewhat intact I suppose:

    " A gas, it is presumed, based on a derivative of fentanyl was used in 2002 in the Moscow theatre hostage crisis to incapacitate Chechen terrorist attackers (and their hostages) too quickly for them to retaliate. More than 15% of those affected died, including 117 of the 800 hostages. "

    As far as I'm concerned, the police forces of the United States do not need any further toys to play with / test out on their " battlefield ". We already have more than enough evidence of less than lethal devices ( read that Tasers ) being used as compliance devices instead of the non-lethal alternatives they were supposed to be.

    In other words, if the officer has no justification in drawing his firearm, he also has no justification in pulling the Taser either.

    Until we have a full blown independent system that polices the police, we don't need to provide them with any more means to terrorize the citizens of this country. Trust in Law Enforcement is already at an all time low in this country. If they keep pushing, they may soon get the " battlefield " they've always wanted. Unfortunately for them, battlefields are rarely one-way affairs. If they consider us the enemy, ( any non-LE typically is the enemy in their eyes ) then they had best realize we vastly outnumber and outgun them in every aspect.

    For you LE's out there, imagine a job where you are in harms way every moment of every day from every citizen of this country. If you don't start culling the bad apples out, we'll simply start viewing you as you do us.

    As the enemy.

    When that day comes, (insert your favorite deity here) help you.
  • "We ordered them to freeze and stop all movement. They kept breathing. They brought their deaths on themselves."

"The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, but wiser people so full of doubts." -- Bertrand Russell

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