School district’s guards to get rifles

DENVER — A suburban Denver school district is arming its security staff with military-style semi-automatic rifles to protect students in case of a school shooting or other violent attack.

The guards, who are not law enforcement officers, already carry handguns.

Douglas County School District security director Richard Payne told The Denver Post that he decided to spend more than $12,000 on the Bushmaster brand AR-15 rifles for the district’s eight armed officers to give them the same tools as law enforcement personnel, including the sheriff’s deputies they train with. He said the rifles will be kept locked in patrol cars.

“They will not be in the schools,” he said.

Payne said he made the decision to buy the rifles himself and that the School Board has not discussed it.

Versions of the AR-15 are made by different manufacturers. A rifle made by Bushmaster was used in the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School shootings in Newtown, Conn. Victims’ families are suing the company, saying it is a military weapon that should not have been sold to civilians.

Douglas County security officers will have to complete a 20-hour training course before the rifles are handed out. The first few guns will be deployed by next month and the rest will be distributed in August, Payne said.

Other Denver-area school districts provide their security guards with either handguns or no firearms at all. Police officers who work as school resource officers carry police-issued weapons.

Ken Trump, a national security consultant in Cleveland, said he had not heard of school security guards elsewhere being equipped with such high-powered weapons.

“It’s not something to do lightly. It better be well thought out,” he said.

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