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| NewsTuesday, August 28, 2007 9:48 PM CDT |
Six guns found at Pontiac H.S.; 3 arrested after lockdown
Students dismissed from H.S., not other schools
UPDATED 7:57 p.m.PONTIAC -- Three Pontiac students are expected in court Wednesday as police and school and community leaders continue to figure out why the kids allegedly brought six guns to the high school Tuesday morning. | Photo gallery The school’s 900-plus students return to the high school Wednesday for an early assembly, followed by two assemblies later in the day for parents and community members. No one was injured in the incident. “This is still an ongoing investigation and my detectives are still interviewing people on what happened and what was intended to happen,” Police Chief Dale Newsome said during a crowded press conference Tuesday afternoon. “I don’t have an honest answer for you right now.” State’s Attorney Tom Brown plans to charge the students with felonies and they’ll likely be tried as adults. They were kept in custody overnight. “The school board will take very step that we can to make this school a safer and more secure place, but the initial thing would be to debrief what happened today ... and from there we will make recommendations to the school board and they can act and add their own ideas to that,” Pontiac Township High School Superintendent Leo Johnson said. “Certainly, that will be a big task in the coming days and weeks, but our immediate concern is the safety of the students tomorrow and the coming weeks.” The school does not have metal detectors but does have a system of security cameras, the tapes of which have not been viewed, Newsome said. Johnson said it is possible the school could add metal detectors, particularly hand-held ones, in the future. “Can you assure the safety of our children? Are we talking about getting metal detectors in our school,” asked Charlotte Snow of Pontiac. “I have three children that go here and I want to know that they are safe going to school every day.” Replied Johnson, “I would not have school open tomorrow if I thought that it wasn’t safe for them to return. I have 950 children and I care about every one of them. We are trying to ensure the safety of our children.” Johnson plans to meet Thursday with the school safety committee. What happened Police gave the following account of what happened: About 8:30 a.m., a student approached a high school resource officer and said two other students had brought guns to school. School authorities instituted a “Code Red,” or a lockdown, until county and city police could search the high school. No one was admitted into the high school or other school buildings and no one was let out. Within minutes, police found a backpack in a locker of one of the suspected students. The bag contained six handguns; Newsome wouldn’t say whether the guns were loaded. When word spread of the lockdown, about 100 people — mostly parents — came to the high school and waited for hours as authorities shared what information they could. Officers carried assault rifles in and around the school before students were released. A police sergeant armed with a shotgun stood inside the community center, where parents were congregated. Police started allowing students to leave about 12:30 p.m., and parents rushed to them. Some teens and parents were in tears as they embraced; other teens seemed unaffected. Earl Ross of Pontiac said five of his nieces and nephews and the children of two friends were inside the school. His oldest niece is pregnant and due in two weeks, he said. “A lot of confusion, a lot of fear, among the parents,” Ross said. “This is small-town USA. It’s not supposed to happen here.” Cheryl Roberts’ 18-year-old daughter, Kayla Thompson, was in her civics class when the lockdown began. She thought it was just going to be a drill. She realized it wasn’t “after we saw the SWAT guys going down the hall with machine guns.” Unnamed hero “The police departments, school district and the students worked together to make this work,” Mayor Scott McCoy said. “Where this started was with an observant student who brought it to the attention of someone that needed to know. There are a lot of heroes here but there is one major hero and that is the student who stood up and did what he or she had to do to make sure that their fellow students and classmates were safe. “There is a student right there that I can’t wait to meet,” said McCoy, who also commended police and school districts for working together. “What we have today is something very minor to what could have obviously happened,” he said. “This is due to the due diligence of the police departments and school districts working together with this Code Red. “The city is safe, school is safe, and all of our students are safe, and that is a direct statement to how well our police department had done and how they reacted to the situation.” |
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