Baltimore School Board Votes to Disarm Police in Schools
The Baltimore City school board voted down a measure that would allow police officers to be armed in schools for the defense of students and teachers.
The Baltimore City school board voted down a measure that would allow police officers to be armed in schools for the defense of students and teachers.
In the wake of the mass shooting at Stoneman Douglas High School, pundits and politicians have proposed dozens of ideas to prevent the next school shooting that range from banning semi-automatic weapons to arming teachers. When elected to Congress in the fall, I will put forward a bill with an America First answer to this problem.
On Tuesday MSNBC correspondent Joy Reid suggested the Great Mills High School shooter would have accessed an AR-15 to outgun the school’s resource officer “if the NRA had its way.”
The good guy with a gun who stopped the Maryland High School shooter Tuesday was 34-year-old Deputy Blaine Gaskill.
When 17-year-old Austin Wyatt Rollins opened fire in Maryland’s Great Mills High School he did so with a firearm he was prohibited from purchasing.
The armed resource officer’s response to an active shooter at Maryland’s Great Mills High School demonstrated that President Trump and the NRA’s approach to school safety saves lives.
During coverage of the attack on Maryland’s Great Mills High School CNN reported that there has been one school shooting per week, “on average,” in 2018.
Reports indicate a resource officer at Maryland’s Great Mills High School “exchanged gunfire” with the attacker Tuesday morning to end the threat.
Maryland’s Great Mills High School was placed on lockdown Tuesday morning following a shooting incident in which injuries were reported.