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Board Approves Shotguns for L.A. School Police

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

Acknowledging that school police often face violence in neighborhoods around campuses, the Los Angeles Board of Education approved a plan Monday to equip school police cars with 12-gauge shotguns.

The school board voted 5 to 2 in favor of the proposal after a contentious hearing in which several board members called the weapons a valuable deterrent but others said they feared that students might be shot accidentally.

“If it would help one student or one parent, it’s worth 100 shotguns,” said board member Barbara Boudreaux. “If we think we live in a safe city, where officers don’t need guns, then we’re living in an unreality.”

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Board member Victoria Castro, like Boudreaux a former school principal, said she also welcomed the shotguns in a school district where violence all too common.

“When it comes to the safety of our campuses, the safety of our children, the safety of our staff, I want the police officers fully equipped,” Castro said.

But one board member, Valerie Fields, questioned whether the school police really need shotguns.

“If crime is down in the state, the county and the school district, why do we need to ratchet up firepower?” asked Fields, who was joined by board President Julie Korenstein in voting against the measure. “We’ve never had shotguns and I don’t see the need for them now.”

And Korenstein lodged her own protest. “If anybody is harmed or killed, this Board of Education will be liable. Our officers need to be role models, not in the position of taking someone out.”

Even those who agreed to equip patrol cars with shotguns said they did so reluctantly.

“The symbolism is unattractive--we’re going to give another weapon to school police--but we have to look at the reality,” said board member Jeff Horton.

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In addition to Boudreaux, Horton and Castro, board members David Tokofsky and George Kiriyama voted for the plan.

A few Orange County school districts, such as Santa Ana Unified and Huntington Beach Union, have their own campus police, but they don’t have firearms.

“Unlike Los Angeles, our officers do not carry guns,” said Huntington Beach Union board member Michael Simons. “They have a pretty different situation than we do up there. We are a suburban school district. They have some urban schools with severe gang problems.”

Simons said his district’s campus police do carry Mace. If more serious protection is needed for a particular reason, school officials call police, he said.

The Los Angeles Unified School District Police Department will buy 75 12-gauge Remington shotguns. The weapons, to be locked in police cars during patrol, will be installed in about 60 days. Officers walking campus beats will continue to carry pistols but will not have the shotguns.

Officers armed with the shotguns will employ the same use-of-force policy as other armed officers in the department. That policy calls for them to respond to situations by first using verbal commands and, if necessary, handcuffs, batons and other physical force before resorting to lethal force.

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School police officers--who undergo the same state-mandated training as personnel from other police agencies--argue that their work has become increasingly dangerous. Their jobs frequently take them into neighborhoods around schools where students and others engage in crime--and where students sometimes wind up as victims. In just the last three months, four students have been killed three of them while walking home from school.

The Los Angeles school police--with 292 sworn personnel the largest school police force in the country--does not maintain statistics on how often officers draw their weapons or how frequently they are fired upon, but Chief Wesley Mitchell said his officers respond to “shots fired” calls two to three times a week.

All officers who handle the shotguns will undergo 16 hours of training on top of the more than 70 hours of firearms training required by the state, Mitchell said.

About two dozen officers attended the board meeting, and they applauded and patted each other on the back after the vote.

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