Montgomery Schools Probing Delayed Response to Gunshot

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Wednesday, April 16, 2008; Page B01
Montgomery County school officials say they are investigating why security measures were not enacted for more than 90 minutes after a student fired a pistol inside Albert Einstein High School in Kensington last week.
Students and teachers carried on as normal, changing classes and taking bathroom breaks, while security workers responded to an 11:30 a.m. report from a student of a bang that "sounded like a gunshot" coming from a bathroom. They quickly found a hole in the bathroom, about the size of a bullet, and were joined by Montgomery police officers. But the principal wasn't notified until about 1 p.m.
"We made a mistake," said Einstein Principal James Fernandez, addressing several hundred parents in the school cafeteria Monday night. "It's being addressed, trust me, and it's something that we have learned from and that the whole school system will certainly learn from."
The delayed response, acknowledged by school officials from the start, has been overshadowed by the successes that followed. Police used high-definition surveillance cameras to locate suspects and find three loaded handguns and several knives in a locker. Officials allege that at least one student was trying to sell the guns.
Five students were charged in connection with the incident. No one was injured. Once emergency procedures were implemented, they were followed to the letter.
Montgomery police spokeswoman Lucille Baur said that the department is reviewing the incident but that it was too soon to comment on the time lapse. She said a police officer inside the school was told that a student had reported a bang "like a firecracker."
But the time lapse remained a concern at the Monday meeting, a session that yielded both praise and pillory of how the school handled the incident. One parent told Fernandez, "I just want to underscore the number and type and range of things that could have happened" during those 90 minutes.
Public schools nationwide have drawn up and rehearsed elaborate emergency plans over the past decade, responding to a steady drumbeat of security threats from school shootings to the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks to the D.C. sniper case. The error at Einstein serves as a frustrating reminder, school officials say, that the procedures work only if they are followed.
"We had an internal breakdown," said Robert Hellmuth, director of school safety and security for the 137,000-student Montgomery system. He said he could not recall a similar lapse of judgment in more than decade of school security work.
It has become common to reconstruct events after a school emergency. After the Virginia Tech shootings, a year ago today, many in the community questioned why university officials had waited more than two hours to alert the entire campus to the first casualties. In that case, university leaders said they did not immediately see that two early-morning dormitory shootings could be prelude to the subsequent classroom rampage.
In the Einstein case, responsibility centers on the leader of a five-person school security team that reports to the principal. A Montgomery police officer assigned to the school is also involved in the investigation; he alerted his superiors at the police department but not school administrators.
Fernandez said he reminded the team leader in a March 10 meeting on school security: "Anything serious, I need to know immediately."

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