Parkland shooting response was delayed because school officials rewound video, report says
At one point, officers waited to ambush the shooter even though he had left the building 30 minutes prior
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Your support makes all the difference.The police response to the mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in February was delayed as a result of school officials rewinding a surveillance video, which gave the false impression that the shooter was still in the school for a period of time after he left.
That’s according to a report from the South Florida Sun-Sentinel, which obtained documents showing that then-assistant principal Jeff Morford and security guard Kelvin Greenleaf began watching a live stream of the attack minutes after it had stopped.
Because they did not see the shooter, they then rewound the tape, and proceeded to relay information to Broward Sheriff’s Deputy Scot Peterson, who then relayed information to officers inside responding to the shooting.
Officers were told at one point that the gunman was coming down stairs even though he had exited nearly 30 minutes earlier. That information slowed officers down from making it up to the third floor of the building — they waited in order to ambush the shooter — where several students had been killed or were wounded.
One girl had a pulse when officers arrived, but had died by the time she had been brought out of the building, one deputy said.
“Had we known the shooter wasn't there, we probably could have flooded that building a lot faster knowing that we're just going to go in there and just start trying to recover victims and wounded people”, George Schmidt, a Coral Springs police officer, told investigators.
The delay was discovered months ago, but it has been unclear what caused the error.
Mr Morford has said that he is unsure if he told Mr Peterson — who relayed the information to the officers in the building — that the information he was giving was old.
Mr Peterson retired after it was discovered that he failed to enter the building during the shooting. Mr Morford has taken a job at a different school as an investigation is undertaken to determine if he ignored student concerns about the shooter, who had previously been a student at the Parkland, Florida school.
The shooter killed 17 people during the massacre, including 14 teenagers and three faculty members.
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