Armed guard leaves gun in school bathroom…

This is a good response to those who are all calling for more armed guards in schools. What could possibly go wrong?

How about leaving a gun in the bathroom in a school fun of students?

Could that happen? It did this week.

He was probably posing in front of the bathroom mirror, and checking himself out with the gun and lines like, “Are you talking to me?” and “Go ahead, make my day.” He put it down to make sure his hair was perfectly coiffed. And then he walked out, forgetting that he left a dangerous weapon in the kids bathroom.

Wait, what was he doing in a kids bathroom in the first place? Doesn’t the staff have their own bathrooms to do their business?

Truth is guns and kids are always a bad idea. Here’s my question: what good is an armed guard walking around with an unloaded weapon? This story doesn’t pass the smell test… I’m willing to be bet he left a loaded gun in the bathroom and the school is running to cover that up. This is not responsible and clear proof to why armed guards in a school is a terrible idea.

Peter

Armed School Security Guard Clark Arnold Leaves Gun Unattended In Student Bathroom

The National Rifle Association sparked controversy in the weeks following Wayne LaPierre’s call to place armed guards in every school. LaPierre called such a move “the one thing that would keep people safe,” but one that may have backfired for a charter school that took his advice to heart.

While President Barack Obama and gun control supporters have expressed skepticism about staffing schools with armed guards, Chatfield School in Lapeer, Mich. — like LaPierre — felt that its students and staff would be safer with such security measures.

So school officials announced last week that they had hired retired county sheriff Clark Arnold to serve as Chatfield’s armed security officer.

“It’s a tremendous asset to the safety of the students,” Chatfield School Director Matt Young told WNEM. “Providing a safe environment and an atmosphere where parents are comfortable, students are comfortable, and feel safe so that they can focus on learning.”

But just days later, school officials revealed to The Flint Journal that Arnold had “made a breach in security protocol” by leaving his unloaded gun in a school restroom “for a few moments.”

Young declined to comment to The Flint Journal on repercussions for Arnold, citing “personnel” reasons, but said in a statement that additional security measures have been implemented and no students were involved or affected by the incident.

Lapeer County Prosecutor Byron Konschuh tells the paper that Arnold likely will not face criminal charges because no one was harmed in the incident.

“It’s almost like no harm no foul,” Konschuh said.

As part of a series of far-reaching gun control proposals, President Barack Obama recommended Wednesday a federal $150 million “Comprehensive School Safety Program” that would help school districts hire school guards, counselors and other staff — if those schools choose to do so.

The proposals come one month after the mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary in Newtown, Conn., that renewed national interest in gun control.

In Arizona, Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio has launched a pet project that sends 500 uniformed volunteers, some armed with automatic weapons, to patrol dozens of schools in the Phoenix area. Critics have called the move “crazy.”

And in 1999, armed guards at Columbine High School still failed to stop what LaPierre calls “a bad guy with a gun” in the deadliest mass shooting at an American high school.

Experts also say that bringing weapons onto school grounds would do more harm than good.

“Singular horrible events like [the Sandy Hook shooting] make us all upset, but if we look at the data, it doesn’t make sense that that’s where we need to beef up security in a very expensive way — not only financially but also at the cost of our children’s feeling of security,” Kenneth Dodge, director of the Center for Child and Family Policy at Duke University told The Huffington Post last month. “Isn’t it more straightforward to just get rid of the guns?”

Source

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January 20, 2013

I know this is serious and everything. But I can’t help thinking of the scene in Pulp Fiction where Bruce Willis goes into his apartment and finds a gun in the kitchen, and John Travolta comes out of the bathroom.

Stupid is as stupid does.

January 20, 2013

Good lord. I’d have expected lanyards for the guns, but then again I also tend to expect that guns should be locked in a safe when not in use.

January 21, 2013

Just because ONE sloppy guard loses his gun does not mean that all guards are sloppy, no more than one president making one mistake makes all presidents ignorant. If we use armed guards to guard private schools and banks and we use armed guards to guard some hospitals (where there are children) and we use armed guards to protect money -our banks, then surely our kids in school r important Too

January 21, 2013

In some of our city schools there are kids and teens who bring guns to the school and to the school yards. If the kids can bring guns (they are not allowed but some do, then it is okay for armed guards to go in there and be protective of the kids in schools.

Tak
January 24, 2013

I like how ONE school shooting happens in many years and we get the jerk freaktards calling for armed guards in every school…but if ONE of those armed guards make a potentially disastrous mistake of leaving a gun (don’t give me the ‘it was unloaded’ excuse – HOW MANY PEOPLE have had gun accidents and said ‘I thought it wasn’t loaded’?? IMHO NO GUN should EVER be considered to be unloaded) in anarea where kids could find it and we’re not supposed to have similarly proportioned response? So do we have to do this armed guards thing until someone does get hurt or killed because of some incompetent law enforcement boob!?

January 28, 2013

peacefulway, try me again when there’s even ONE recorded instance of an armed guard doing anything but get killed.