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08/28/2010 10:14 #52592
Testing estrip's latest feature08/27/2010 21:38 #52587
Shooting prisoners with energy beamsLA authorities plan to use heat-beam ray in jail
AP
This image provided by the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department shows an Assault Intervention Device (AID) at the Pitchess Detention Center's North AP – This image provided by the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department shows an Assault Intervention Device …
By THOMAS WATKINS, Associated Press Writer Thomas Watkins, Associated Press Writer – Fri Aug 27, 12:50 am ET
LOS ANGELES – A device designed to control unruly inmates by blasting them with a beam of intense energy that causes a burning sensation is drawing heat from civil rights groups who fear it could cause serious injury and is "tantamount to torture."
The mechanism, known as an "Assault Intervention Device," is a stripped-down version of a military gadget that sends highly focused beams of energy at people and makes them feel as though they are burning. The Los Angeles County sheriff's department plans to install the device by Labor Day, making it the first time in the world the technology has been deployed in such a capacity.
The American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California criticized Sheriff Lee Baca's decision in a letter sent Thursday, saying that the technology amounts to a ray gun at a county jail. The 4-feet-tall weapon, which looks like a cross between a robot and a satellite radar, will be mounted on the ceiling and can swivel.
It is remotely controlled by an operator in a separate room who lines up targets with a joystick.
The ACLU said the weapon was "tantamount to torture," noting that early military versions resulted in five airmen suffering lasting burns. It requested a meeting with Baca, who declined the invitation.
The sheriff unveiled the device last week and said it would be installed in the dorm of a jail in north Los Angeles County. It is far less powerful than the military version and has various safeguards in place, including a three-second limit to each beam of heat.
The natural response when blasted — to leap out the way — would be helpful in bringing difficult inmates under control and quelling riots, the sheriff said.
But the sheriff was creating a dangerous environment with "a weapon that can cause serious injury that is being put into a place where there is a long history of abuse of prisoners," ACLU attorney Peter Eliasberg said. "That is a toxic combination."
Cmdr. Bob Osborne, who oversees technology for the sheriff's department, said the concerns were unfounded. He said he stood in front of the beam more than 50 times and that it never caused any sort of lasting damage.
"The neat thing with this device is you experience pain but you are not injured by it," Osborne said. "It doesn't injure your skin, the beam doesn't have the power to do that."
He said the device would be a more humane way of dealing with jail disturbances. Unlike hitting inmates with batons or deploying tear gas, a shot from the beam has no aftereffects, he said.
The device was made specifically for the sheriff's department by Raytheon Missile Systems. Sheriff's spokesman Steve Whitmore said its $750,000 cost was paid for by a Department of Justice technology grant.
After a six-month trial, the sheriff will determine if the device is effective and if it should be deployed in other jails.
"When this pilot program is done, the realistic hope is it will accomplish not only what the sheriff's department wants but what the ACLU wants, which is to save lives harmlessly," Whitmore said.
A Raytheon spokesman on Thursday referred questions to the sheriff's department, but provided a fact sheet describing how the device only penetrates skin to a depth 1/64 of an inch. The military's version of the device can shoot a beam more than 800 feet but the sheriff's department model has a maximum range of 85 feet.
Angelica Arias, an attorney with the county's Office of Independent Review, which monitors the sheriff's department, said only deputies with special training would be able to use the device and a video would be automatically recorded each time it is operated.
"Based on the level of scrutiny the department has put on itself and its training, it doesn't appear there would be too much wiggle room for misuse," Arias said
08/22/2010 11:26 #52511
Fuck you (very, very much)08/20/2010 18:24 #52480
Free rangeHey hey hows it going? crazy thing, i was looking for some info on the SGI in buffalo so i typed in buffalo / phoenix SGI in to the search bar and the second link that came up was one to your blog. But not just your blog It linked to the post in which you got the parking ticket cause of the stuff i gave you before i left. thought that was WEIRD i mean what are the odd of that. I didn't even know you were a blogger :) been reading thought some of your posts and it's really making missing buffalo. I just may have to move back. :) fell free to call me anytime of you can it would be great to hear from you :) BTW it's DAN from Phoenix in case you didn't know who this was :) miss you buddy
I want chickens so bad.
08/18/2010 19:28 #52472
Plumbing issuesHere you can see on the left a small drop of water coming out of the joint. I felt above it and it was dry so it is definitely at the joint.
This is from the bottom up. Again you can see the drop at the joint.
This picture is to ask if the knob at the right end is to turn off the water before I try and fix it?
I have no idea what I am doing so I just want to know if I can fix this myself or if I should call the dumb and dumber team to try and fix it? I really don't want them coming in here when I am not home and I know they won't try and arrange a mutual time to come and fix it. Last I knew it was they just show up on Saturday morning to come and fix whatever problem without giving notice first.
ya, that sucks. a major pro to renting is not having to deal with crap like that.
I think I'll just leave the bucket underneath and hope it doesn't get worse. I hate my building management so much.
There are a number of kitchen sink DIY instructions around the web, but Paul is right. May not be the wisest thing to mess with unknown water-spurting dragons.
I wouldn't do this without someone which know plumbing being there yo help if you break it.
The two knobs turn off water from the double sinks above in my kitchen (do you double sinks?)
It might be an easy fix but do you have a rubber gasket? Maybe the old one providing the seal has worn off? It has a similar function to the rubber gasket between the blender jar and the blade - prevents fluids from leaking and provides a tight seal.
i want the the robot, but only to zap rude people, and or anyone with bad style.
1. Isn't it weird how it is made to look human in form like a robot, looks like a mouth a chest then a lower body, looks like it could walk like a robot, see if it looks cudly or human it isn't as tortureous
2. It feels like a burn but doesn't burn you that has to be Bullshit, what might happen is it doesn't do damage that won't heal, like when you where a kid and they did that indain burn to you.....
3. The Industrail Prision Complex is very real. There is a lot of money and profit made from sending people to Prisons and this machine is made by some millitary firm..... I'm not even a conspiracy theoryist.