Tweeter said:Teamless wrote:But guns aren't allowed on campus, how was a shooting possible?
No response ...Pat Johnson @_PatJohnson_
@gunfreeschools Why are all the shootings/massacres at "gun-free schools"?
7:26 PM - 2 Apr 12 via web ·
Return to “California Medical School Shooting”
Tweeter said:Teamless wrote:But guns aren't allowed on campus, how was a shooting possible?
No response ...Pat Johnson @_PatJohnson_
@gunfreeschools Why are all the shootings/massacres at "gun-free schools"?
7:26 PM - 2 Apr 12 via web ·
yes and I bet, like Austin, they praise police response timeBeiruty wrote:The suspect turned himself in, he stopped at the mall and told citizens he just shot few people. Yahooooo, much easier for the cops to find him. It costs too much to fund the PDs in CA.
Police captured the suspected gunman inside an Alameda grocery store five miles away from the shooting site at Oikos University after he allegedly walked to the customer service counter and told employees, "I just shot some people.
Head of university heard 30 rounds or so ...03Lightningrocks wrote:I am having trouble seeing how there could things like this happening in California. Everyone knows they have very strict laws concerning gun ownership.
he heard about 30 gunshots in the building.
and, that issue about teaching hospitals/clinics run by universities ... since that is a nursing school and medicine school... a private school tooBeiruty wrote:Campus carry in TX on the agenda again?? More valid reasons as shown in this case?
Hooray for quick response times (which, according to a 2002 Federal study and report, [page 14 https://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/jr000248c.pdf" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false; ] are TOTALLY irrelevant, but always praised... it makes everyone *feel* safer)The suspect being questioned in the mass shooting at an Oakland religious nursing college was detained several miles away in Alameda, officials said
School Staff & Students Are Often First
Responders
Most shooting incidents were
not resolved by law enforcement
intervention. More than half of the
attacks ended before law enforce-ment responded to the scene—
despite law enforcement ’s often
prompt response. In these cases,
faculty or fellow students stopped
the attacker, or the attacker either
stopped shooting on his own or
committed suicide. Many of the
incidents lasted 20 minutes or less.
Schools can make the best use of
their resources by working with
law enforcement on prevention
efforts as well as critical incident
response plans.