Yes. Rhode Island courts judge dangerousness by how an object is used, not by what the object is. A car driven at another person is one of the most common non-traditional ADW theories in the state and is charged routinely in road-rage cases. Broken bottles, keys, cell phones, and even hands and feet have all supported ADW charges when the force and injury pattern justified it. That said, the classification is fact-specific and litigable. A good Rhode Island assault with a dangerous weapon lawyer will attack the weapon element at the bail hearing, in a motion to reduce, and at trial, pushing for the charge to drop to simple assault or felony assault when the object was not objectively capable of producing serious injury in the way it was actually used.