Pubdate: Tues, 9 June 1999 Source: Guardian, The (UK) Copyright: Guardian Media Group 1999 Contact: http://www.guardian.co.uk/ Author: Julian Borger, in Washington US PRISONS 'USE ELECTRIC SHOCK BELTS FOR TORTURE' Increasing numbers of prisons in the US are controlling their inmates with the use of electric shock weapons, which are frequently activated accidentally or used arbitrarily as instruments of torture, Amnesty International alleged in a report published yesterday. The British-based human rights organisation called for the stun belt to be banned, describing it as "a weapon that is worn by its victim". A box at the back of the belt, which is triggered by remote control, administers an eight-second shock of 50,000 volts, temporarily incapacitating the wearer with pain. "It may be state-of-the-art but it's torture nonetheless... It's torture by remote control," William Schulz, Amnesty's US director, said. He was launching a campaign backed by the former heavyweight boxer Muhammad Ali and by Frank Serpico, a former whistleblower on corruption in the New York police force. The British prison service tested stun belts in 1995, but a spokesman said yesterday that the tests had been abandoned. The manufacture or sale of such electric shock weapons is banned in Britain. An Ohio firm, Stun Tech Inc, says it has sold 1,800 belts to the American prison system, most of the devices in circulation. The company markets them as a non-lethal means of control in increasingly overcrowded and understaffed prisons. But Amnesty International cited instances of accidental use and claims of deliberate abuse. During a trial in April in Florida, a police officer accidentally pushed the button on a remote control device, delivering a 50,000 volt shock to the defendant, Jeffrey Weaver. Amnesty's report quotes one of the lawyers present as saying that "the defendant shouted in pain, repeatedly banged his hands on the table... and tried to pull the belt away from his body." In April last year a California judge ordered a defendant's stun belt to be activated to stop him interrupting court proceedings, although - according to the Amnesty report - he was "being loud, but not abusive; nor was he making any threatening or aggressive movements." The report also alleged that in Louisiana, minimum security prisoners who are HIV positive or have Aids are regularly made to wear the belt because of their medical condition. It cites allegations of abuse at the Red Onion state prison in Virginia, where the mostly white guards are said to have used stun belts to administer shocks accompanied by racist abuse hurled at the inmates, three-quarters of whom are black. Speaking at a press conference in Washington yesterday, Mr Serpico said: "Stun belts and electric instruments allow corruption and brutality to flourish because there is no evidence and there are no tell-tale signs left behind." Speaking from Stun Tech headquarters in Cleveland, the company's chairman Dennis Kaufman said that the stun belts leave a visible red mark for at least a month after being activated and so cannot be used without trace. He disputed Amnesty's claims that his products were being used for torture. "Any inmate can say anything, but they're behind bars for a reason. They have nothing to lose," Mr Kaufman said. He conceded that there had been "several accidental activations," but argued that the consequences were far less serious than the accidental firing of guns. He rejected allegations that the belts had not been submitted to proper medical tests. "We have video documentation of them being used on 7,000 people with no signs of permanent harm," Mr Kaufman said. But Laila Ali, representing her father, Muhammad Ali, said the widespread use of belts in prisons across the US represented "a step backwards" for American civilisation and that they "reduce people to animals." "Many times in his life my father fought for a belt. Today, he and I are fighting against one," Ms Ali said. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck