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Fearing the Worst, Schools Deploy Armed Police To Thwart Gun Violence

PITTSBURGH 鈥 A false alarm that a gunman was roaming one Catholic high school and then another in March 2023 touched off frightening evacuations and a robust police response in the city. It also prompted the diocese to rethink what constitutes a model learning environment.

Months after hundreds of students were met by SWAT teams, the Catholic Diocese of Pittsburgh began forming its own armed police force.

Wendell Hissrich, a former safety director for the city and career FBI unit chief, was hired that year to form a department to safeguard 39 Catholic schools as well as dozens of churches in the region. Hissrich has since added 15 officers and four supervisors, including many formerly retired officers and state troopers, who now oversee school campuses fitted with Stop the Bleed kits, cameras, and defibrillators.

When religious leaders first asked for advice after what are known as 鈥渟watting鈥 incidents, the veteran lawman said he didn鈥檛 hesitate to deliver blunt advice: 鈥淵ou need to put armed officers in the schools.鈥

A photo of a man sitting for a photo in his office.
Wendell Hissrich, a former career FBI unit chief, was hired by the Catholic Diocese of Pittsburgh in 2023 to help thwart gun violence in schools. He has since hired many retired officers and state troopers, who oversee school campuses fitted with Stop the Bleed kits, cameras, and defibrillators. (Christine Spolar for 麻豆女优 Health News)

But he added that the officers had to view schools as a special assignment: 鈥淚 want them to be role models. I want them to be good fits within the school. I鈥檓 looking for someone to know how to deal with kids and with parents 鈥 and, most importantly, knows how to de-escalate a situation.鈥

Gun violence is a leading cause of death for young people in America, and the possibility of shootings has influenced costly decision-making in school systems as administrators juggle fear, duty, and dizzying statistics in efforts to keep schools safe from gun harm. In the first week of September, the risks were made tragically clear again, this time in Georgia, as a teenager stands accused of shooting his way through his high school and killing two students and two teachers.

Still, scant research supports the creation of school police forces to deter gun violence 鈥 and what data exists can raise as many questions as answers. are, in fact, suicides 鈥 a sobering statistic from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that reflects a range of ills. and studies found that as white children to experience firearm assaults. Research on racial bias in policing overall in the U.S. as well as studies on have prompted calls for caution. And an oft-cited U.S. Secret Service review of 67 thwarted plots at schools supports reasons to examine parental responsibility as well as police intervention as effective ways to stop firearm harm.

The Secret Service threat assessment, published in 2021, analyzed plots from 2006 to 2018 and found students who planned school violence had guns readily at home. It also found that school districts that contracted sworn law officers, who work as full- or part-time school resource officers, had some advantage. The officers proved pivotal in about a third of the 67 foiled plots by current or former students.

鈥淢ost schools are not going to face a mass shooting. Even though there are more of them 鈥 and that鈥檚 horrible 鈥 it is still a small number,鈥 said Mo Canady, executive director of the National Association of School Resource Officers. 鈥淏ut administrators can鈥檛 really allow themselves to think that way.

鈥淭hey have to think, 鈥業t could happen here, and how do I prevent it?'鈥

About a 20-minute drive north of Pittsburgh, a top public school system in the region decided the risk was too great. North Allegheny Superintendent Brendan Hyland last year recommended retooling what had been a two-person school resource officer team 鈥 staffed since 2018 by local police 鈥 into a 13-person internal department with officers stationed at each of the district鈥檚 12 buildings.

Several school district board members voiced unease about armed officers in the hallways. 鈥淚 wish we were not in the position in our country where we have to even consider an armed police department,鈥 board member Leslie Britton Dozier, a lawyer and a mother, said during a public planning meeting.

Within weeks, all voted for Hyland鈥檚 request, estimated to cost $1 million a year.

Hyland said the aim is to help 1,200 staff members and 8,500 students 鈥渨ith the right people who are the right fit to go into those buildings.鈥 He oversaw the launch of a police unit in a smaller school district, just east of Pittsburgh, in 2018.

Hyland said North Allegheny had not focused on any single news report or threat in its decision, but he and others had thought through how to set a standard of vigilance. North Allegheny does not have or want metal detectors, devices that some districts have seen as necessary. But a trained police unit willing to learn every entrance, stairway, and cafeteria and who could develop trust among students and staffers seemed reasonable, he said.

鈥淚鈥檓 not Edison. I鈥檓 not inventing something,鈥 Hyland said. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 want to be the district that has to be reactive. I don鈥檛 want to be that guy who is asked: 鈥榃hy did you allow this to happen?鈥欌

Since 2020, the role of police in educational settings has been hotly debated. The video-recorded death of George Floyd, a Black man in Minneapolis who was murdered by a white police officer during an arrest, prompted national outrage and demonstrations against police brutality and racial bias.

Some school districts, notably in large cities such as Los Angeles and Washington, D.C., reacted to concerns by reducing or removing their school resource officers. Examples of unfair or biased treatment by school resource officers drove some of the decisions. This year, however, there has been apparent rethinking of the risks in and near school property and, in California, Colorado, and Virginia, parents are .

The 1999 bombing plot and shooting attack of Columbine High School and a massacre in 2012 at Sandy Hook Elementary School are often raised by school and police officials as reasons to prepare for the worst. But the value of having police in schools also came under sharp review after a blistering federal review of the mass shooting in 2022 at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas.

The federal Department of Justice this year produced a 600-page report that laid out multiple failures by the school police chief, including his attempt to try to negotiate with the killer, who had already shot into a classroom, and waiting for his officers to search for keys to unlock the rooms. Besides the teenage shooter, 19 children and two teachers died. Seventeen other people were injured.

The DOJ report was based on hundreds of interviews and a review of 14,000 pieces of data and documentation. This summer, the former chief was indicted by a grand jury for his role in 鈥渁bandoning and endangering鈥 survivors and for failing to identify an active shooter attack. Another school police officer was charged for his role in placing the murdered students in 鈥渋mminent danger鈥 of death.

There have also been increased judicial efforts to pursue enforcement of firearm storage laws and to hold accountable adults who own firearms used by their children in shootings. For the first time this year, the who fatally shot four students in 2021 were convicted of involuntary manslaughter for not securing a newly purchased gun at home.

In recent days, Colin Gray, the father of the teenage shooting suspect at Apalachee High School in Georgia, was charged with second-degree murder 鈥 the most severe charges yet against a parent whose child had access to firearms at home. The 14-year-old, Colt Gray, who was apprehended by school resource officers on the scene, according to initial media reports, also faces murder charges.

Hissrich, the Pittsburgh diocese鈥檚 safety and security director, said he and his city have a hard-earned appreciation for the practice and preparation needed to contain, if not thwart, gun violence. In January 2018, Hissrich, then the city鈥檚 safety officer, met with Jewish groups to consider a deliberate approach to safeguarding facilities. Officers cooperated and were trained on lockdown and rescue exercises, he said.

Ten months later, on Oct. 27, 2018, a lone gunman entered the Tree of Life synagogue and, within minutes, killed 11 people who had been preparing for morning study and prayer. Law enforcement deployed quickly, trapping and capturing the shooter and rescuing others caught inside. The coordinated response was praised by witnesses at the trial where the killer was convicted in 2023 on federal charges and sentenced to die for the worst antisemitic attack in U.S. history.

鈥淚 knew what had been done for the Jewish community as far as safety training and what the officers knew. Officers practiced months before,鈥 Hissrich said. He believes schools need the same kind of plans and precautions. 鈥淭o put officers in the school without training,鈥 he said, 鈥渨ould be a mistake.鈥

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