Just when you thought it couldn’t get any worse, it did. The
“it” in the sentence refers to the Broward County Sheriff’s department response
to the massacre at Marjorie Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, FL.
Given that high school children have used the massacre as an
impetus to begin a campaign against guns, it is worth underscoring, yet again,
the multiple failures of the sheriff’s department. Keep in mind, Sheriff Scott
Israel received a vote of no confidence from his department. And yet, he still
has his job. Why has the media not been disgracing him and calling for his
ouster? It must be more politically expedient to blame it on the NRA.
To its great credit, the New York Times reported yesterday on yet
another instance of dereliction by the sheriff’s department. Not from Israel
himself, but from a leader in his department, a captain who refused to allow paramedics to
enter the school while children lay dying.
Read it:
While
students and teachers lay gravely wounded inside Marjory Stoneman Douglas High
School, a Fire Department official outside was begging to send in paramedics.
In the
chaos immediately after the shooting rampage on Feb. 14 in Parkland, Fla., the
Coral Springs Fire Department’s deputy chief, Michael McNally, repeatedly asked
to dispatch specialized teams of paramedics and police officers to treat
victims.
But his
requests, according to a report the department released on Thursday, were
denied by a captain with the Broward County Sheriff’s Office who was overseeing
the law enforcement response.
Chief
McNally wrote that he asked six times to send in the groups, but that Capt. Jan
Jordan kept offering the same response: She “would have to check before
approving this request.”
One hates to have to mention this, but why was it that a
captain needed to check before approving? We already know that cowardly on-duty
deputy Scot Peterson ran for cover when the shooting started. Now we see that a
female captain was incapable of making a decision. Are you telling me that a captain had no discretion in allowing in paramedics? It feels like weakness, the kind that cares more with self-protection than with helping others. Could it be that she was
hired to fill a diversity quota? Will that be a consolation to parents of
children who lay bleeding in the building?
The Times continues:
The
two-page report by Chief McNally, which outlines his interactions with the
authorities outside the school, was the latest account of frustration and
bewilderment over the law enforcement response.
After
he arrived at the school, he offered four times to send in paramedics while the
police were watching security footage to find the gunman, identified as Nikolas Cruz, a former
student. The deputy chief told Captain Jordan that the teams — which each
consist of three to four police officers and at least three paramedics — were
specially trained to treat victims in an active shooter situation and would
enter only the areas that the police had searched.
He
offered two more times after the police discovered the video delay and saw that
the gunman had escaped unnoticed from the building. The deputy chief was told
to wait. “Once again, the incident commander advised, ‘She would have to check
and let me know,’” he wrote in the report.
Excellent story from the Times. Kudos for good reporting.
2 comments:
According to the Miami Herald (3/7), she ignored the wounded and dying "in accordance with training".
Broward County needs to replace its county managers.
Post a Comment