Friday, February 23, 2018

32 YEARS, GONNA RETIRE, AIN’T ABOUT TO ENTER THAT SCHOOL BUILDING AND GET SHOT

As Gunman Rampaged Through Florida School, Armed Deputy ‘Never Went In’

By Alan Blinder and Patricia Mazzei

The New York Times
February 22, 2018

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — The only armed sheriff’s deputy at a Florida high school where 17 people were killed took cover outside rather than charging into the building when the massacre began, the Broward County sheriff said on Thursday. The sheriff also acknowledged that his office received 23 calls related to the suspect going back a decade, including one last year that said he was collecting knives and guns, but may not have adequately followed up.

The deputy, Scot Peterson, resigned on Thursday after being suspended without pay after Sheriff Scott Israel reviewed surveillance video.

“He never went in,” Sheriff Israel said in a news conference. He said the video showed Deputy Peterson doing “nothing.”

“There are no words,” said Sheriff Israel, who described himself as “devastated, sick to my stomach.”

Two other deputies were placed on restricted duty on Thursday because they may have mishandled tips called in to the sheriff’s office over the past two years warning that the suspect, Nikolas Cruz, appeared intent on becoming a school shooter, Sheriff Israel said.

The revelations added to a growing list of failures and missed signs by the authorities that might have helped prevent one of the deadliest school shootings in American history.

The F.B.I. received a tip last month from someone close to Mr. Cruz that he owned a gun and had talked of committing a school shooting, the bureau revealed last week, acknowledging that it had failed to investigate. The tip about Mr. Cruz appeared to be the second in four months, after another person told the bureau about an online comment apparently posted by Mr. Cruz that he wanted to become “a professional school shooter.”

The Florida Department of Children and Families, the state social services agency, looked into Mr. Cruz’s well-being in 2016 after he posted on social media that he was cutting himself, but investigators determined he was not at risk of harming himself or others. The Broward County Public Schools had disciplinary complaints on Mr. Cruz dating back to when he was in middle school, including a long history of fighting.

Sheriff Israel said he informed Deputy Peterson on Thursday that he was being suspended without pay and placed under internal investigation. At 12:37 p.m. on Thursday, sheriff’s office records show, Deputy Peterson, signed his retirement papers, which amounted to a resignation. He had been with the office for more than 32 years.

“The investigation will continue,” Sheriff Israel said.

The surveillance video, which was not released, showed Deputy Peterson remained outside the west side of the building for at least four minutes while the gunman was inside, according to Sheriff Israel. The shooting rampage at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School lasted less than six minutes. The video was corroborated by witness statements, Sheriff Israel said.

The New York Times reported on Wednesday that an officer from the Coral Springs Police Department who responded to the shooting had seen Deputy Peterson in a Stoneman Douglas High parking lot. The deputy “was seeking cover behind a concrete column leading to a stairwell,” Officer Tim Burton said.

In the chaos immediately after the shooting, there were other missteps. A 20-minute delay in school surveillance video confused Coral Springs police officers trying to find the gunman, said Chief Tony Pustizzi. By then, the suspect had already left the building.

Chief Pustizzi called it a communications failure. The video system allows for real-time playback

“At first the guys are hearing, ‘Oh, he’s on the second floor.’ Well, it’s not true, ‘cause we have people on the second floor and the people are saying, ‘Well, he’s not on the second floor,’” Chief Pustizzi said, adding that, if anything, the officers were “more expeditious” as they moved through the school under the belief the gunman was still there.

Coral Springs police have said they were the first to respond to the shooting. Sheriff Israel, who defended his office’s response on Wednesday and said his own deputies had not hung back outside the building, said on Thursday that the Coral Springs officers acted “heroically.”

Samantha Fuentes, an 18-year-old senior at Stoneman Douglas High who was shot in both legs, said she never saw Deputy Peterson during the “30 minutes” that passed before SWAT officers arrived at the first-floor classroom in which she and other students had been taking a class.

“He is not someone who has much of a presence” in the school, she said.

Sheriff Israel, flanked by two of his top aides, appeared emotional Thursday during the news conference in which he described Deputy Peterson’s conduct. His eyes appeared to glisten, and his speech was sometimes halting.

The two other deputies placed on restricted duty pending an internal investigation were identified by the sheriff’s office as Edward Eason and Guntis Treijs.

In November 2017, a caller told the authorities that Mr. Cruz had been stockpiling guns and knives. In a summary of the call, the sheriff’s office said the caller, located in Massachusetts, worried that Mr. Cruz “will kill himself one day and believes he could be a school shooter in the making.” A deputy contacted the person who called, but no report was filed. The caller was referred to the sheriff’s office in Palm Beach County, where the caller said Mr. Cruz lived.

In February 2016, the sheriff’s office received what it described as “thirdhand information” that Mr. Cruz “planned to shoot up the school” and had posted a picture on Instagram of a “juvenile with guns.” A deputy determined that Mr. Cruz had knives and a BB gun and forwarded the information to the school resource officer at Stoneman Douglas High. That was Deputy Peterson.

Some of the other calls reveal further details about Mr. Cruz’s troubled childhood. In November 2014, someone reported that a person fitting Mr. Cruz’s description shot a chicken with a possible BB gun. Mr. Cruz was found to own an airsoft rifle, which he admitted to using, but denied he shot chickens.

And in September 2016, a peer counselor at Stoneman Douglas High alerted the school resource officer — likely Deputy Peterson — that Mr. Cruz “possibly ingested gasoline” the week prior “in an attempt to commit suicide and is cutting himself.”

“Mental health counselor advised Cruz did not meet criteria for Baker Act,” the summary said, referring to the Florida law that allows the police to commit the mentally ill against their will.

Stoneman Douglas High initiated a “threat assessment” on Mr. Cruz after the counselor’s report. The Florida Department of Children of Families looked into whether Mr. Cruz was at risk of harming himself or others and concluded he was not because he was living with his mother, attending school and seeing a counselor.
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ANOTHER "CASUALTY" OF THE FLORIDA SHOOTING

by Bob Walsh

Deputy Scott Peterson, 54, the school resources officer at the Florida school that was shot up on Valentine's Day, is no longer employed. Peterson put in his retirement paperwork and resigned the same day he was notified he was under investigation regarding the shooting. Peterson did not enter the school when he became aware of the shooting.

Current police procedure and training indicates that, when dealing with an active shooting in this environment, whatever force is available should immediately enter and attempt to engage the bad guy rather than waiting for backup. He clearly screwed the pooch and deserves to be gone.

11 comments:

Anonymous said...

Well there ya go...your typical and average cop. Cops are ohhhhhh so ready to act tough and harass unarmed citizens like the bullies they are..but when push comes to shove they aren't with a pile of shit.

Trey Rusk said...

It's sad if these allegations are true. Law enforcement as a whole should be ashamed of the alleged conduct. It's pretty safe to say that he didn't do his job. But typical? I'm afraid not. I wonder, is it true that most people that criticize cops as a whole have some sort of dealings with the criminal justice system? In my experience it's usually some person with a chip on his shoulder because of an arrest. Probably that person's own criminal behavior that they will never admit was their fault.

Anonymous 3:15, does this sound familiar?

Anonymous said...

I think that Anon 3:15 is on spot with his assessment. Besides it is now 4;cops, not 1, that wouldn't confront the shooter in the school.

Anonymous said...

In addition to my last post...how long did the police wait outside the pulse nightclub while people were being murdered? Hours...not minutes. So its not an isolated incident now is it?

Anonymous said...

That's not accurate..it wasn't just 4..now it is several.

Anonymous said...

So where is bark to defend coward cops now? Just a fucking blowhard is all he is.

BarkGrowlBite said...

Listen 12:21, you cop-hating asshole! I do not defend cowardly cops or bad policing. So go fuck yourself!

Anonymous said...

Yeah well it's true you moron. You are always screaming the praises of the police and how great they are..but you are mysteriously silent when they do stuff like this. Do you really have to wonder why soooo many people hate the police? I remember you made a comment on grits something to the effect of cops "protecting your worthless butts". So what were your almighty police protecting when the pulse nightclub and the Florida school got shot up? They were protecting their own "worthless butts".

BarkGrowlBite said...

While it is obvious that you are a police-hating asshole, this 'moron' will still give you the forum in which you can espouse your hateful horseshit.

Trey Rusk said...

This is what happens when you blog on Grits. You drag some of that police bashing trash back with you.

bob walsh said...

Dear anon various: I admit I am always suspicious of anonymous posters calling people "morons." If you had bothered to read carefully you would notice that Howie did NOT defend this non-responsive cop and has not moved to defend others that may be in a similar boat. His writing is also both articulate and witty, if on occasion a bit crude. The appellation "moron" is clearly inappropriate. You would be a little more believable if you had the guts to stand up and put your name on your vitriol. By the way, there is now (pending further investigation and review of tapes of radio traffic) some reason to believe the Broward deputies were ORDERED to not respond inside until SWAT arrived (even though that is clearly contrary to current training and tactics). I am happy to wait for an actual investigation to complete and will probably not throw around too much in the way of personal attacks while I am waiting. Maybe you should do the same dickbreath.