Safe operating procedures in the
British Army eventually ruled out firing the gun directly at the human body, as it was found that the rounds could cause serious and permanent injuries. In 1993, a constable of the
Bermuda Police Service, acting the role of enemy for a rifle company of the
Bermuda Regiment, being exercised at
Camp Lejeune USMC Base, was seriously injured by a baton round fired from a soldier's FRG, shattering his jaw, which required extensive surgery to reconstruct. Subsequently, orders were given that the weapons were to be fired into the ground ahead of rioters. The baton rounds would deflect upwards into the rioters, but would lose
kinetic energy in the process. ==Gallery==