OFFICER

‘He Never Went In': BSO Deputy Retires After Suspension For Failing to Respond to Parkland Shooting

The NRA criticized the BSO sheriff, saying he failed to protect the children

What to Know

  • The school resource officer who was at the Parkland school during the shooting but "never went in" has retired after being suspended.
  • Citing security footage, the Broward Sheriff says officer Scot Peterson took a position outside the school during the shooting.
  • Two other officers have been placed on restrictive duty while investigators look into 23 previous calls received related to the gunman.

The school resource officer who was at the Parkland school but "never went in" where 17 people were shot dead has retired after Broward County Sheriff Scott Israel on Thursday said the official had been suspended without pay.

Israel said school resource officer Scot Peterson took a position outside of  Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School as the onslaught occurred, citing security footage. Israel said Peterson was "absolutely on campus," adding that he was armed and in uniform during the shooting.

"After seeing video and witness statements, and Peterson's own statement, I decided this morning ... to suspend Scot Peterson without pay pending an internal investigation," Israel said, adding that Peterson chose to then resign and retire.

When asked what Peterson should have done during the shooting, Israel said he should have "went in, addressed the killer and killed" him.

"Our main goal at this point, absent of helping these families heal and keeping our schools safe, is making sure this killer receives the justice he deserves," Israel previously said.

President Donald Trump reacted to Israel's revelation Friday morning, telling reporters on the South Lawn that Peterson "certainly did a poor job."

"That's a case where somebody was outside, they're trained, they didn't react properly under pressure. Or they were coward," Trump said. "When it came time to get in there and do something, he didn't have the courage."

Trump and the NRA have pushed for "hardening" schools against attackers and arming teachers and other staff members with guns in the school. However, critics have said that is beyond the scope of a teacher's job and could present new safety challenges.

The NRA on Friday responded to Israel's comment to an NRA spokesperson during a town hall on Wednesday in which he said the NRA is "not standing up" for the survivors of the shooting.

"No Sheriff Israel, you were the one that didn’t PROTECT these children and that is your job. You run the largest fully accredited sheriff's office in the United States, yet your office failed this community," NRA wrote on Twitter.

Hours after the NRA's post, the hashtag #ResignSheriffIsrael began trending on Twitter.

When asked how a trained, armed officer who didn't "didn't react properly under pressure" would be different from arming a teacher, the president said that "you have to have a certain degree of offensive power in the school, not just defensive."

In 2014, the Broward County Crime Commission awarded Peterson with the title of School Resource Officer of the Year for the City of Parkland District.

The group said Peterson proved "to be reliable in handling issues with tact and judgment."

The Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office said the suspended deputy's family requested privacy and protection.

Israel also addressed the 23 previous calls BSO received related to the gunman. Two other officers who previously responded to one of the calls related to accused gunman Nikolas Cruz have been placed on restrictive duty.

"In two of these cases, after being briefed by internal affairs, I've restricted two of our deputies to take statements and make a decision to see whether they should have and could have" done something to prevent the shooting, Israel said.

BSO released a document that detailed each call it received related to Cruz – including the two calls that led to the unidentified officers being placed on restrictive duty.

The two officers are facing an internal affairs investigation and a BSO internal review.

On Feb. 2, 2016, a deputy responded to a suspicious incident call in which someone reported that Cruz made a post on Instagram indicating he "planned to shoot up the school." However, the police document suggests the specific target was "unknown."

The deputy made contact with the caller who wished to remain anonymous. The deputy determined that Cruz had knives and a BB gun.

"Information forwarded to Stoneman Douglas School Resource Officer," the document's response description concludes.

It has not yet been confirmed if Peterson, who was assigned to the school for years, was the resource officer who received the information of the threat.

The other call and response under review occurred on Nov. 11.

"Caller advised subject Nikolas Cruz is collecting guns and knives. Cruz wants to join the Army. Concerned he will kill himself one day and believes he could be a school shooter in the making," the document reads.

The deputy who responded contacted the caller via telephone.

"No report was initiated," the document reads.

In an interview after the shooting, the deputy said he referred the caller to the Palm Beach Sheriff's Office as the caller said he believed the Cruz was living in Lake Worth.

The BSO press conference occurred after 17 people, mostly teenagers, were shot dead at the school in Parkland.

The accused gunman is a former student who had previously been reported over disturbing behavior particularly about weapons.

Israel on Wednesday announced that he directed a new policy that will arm Broward County deputies stationed at schools with a rifle.

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