Dayton Daily News

Fla. sheriff defends self over school shooting

- By Drew Harwell and Mark Berman

Broward County Sheriff Scott Israel said Sunday he should bear no responsibi­lity for the missed warning signs before the Feb. 14 mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School that left 17 students and faculty dead.

“I can only take responsibi­lity for what I knew about,” said Israel in an interview on CNN’s “State of the Union.” “I’ve given amazing leadership to this agency.”

Israel has faced intensifyi­ng questions about the agency’s response to the massacre following the revelation that an armed deputy on the scene did not enter the school while the shooter was inside. That deputy, Scot Peterson, retired last week after being suspended.

Israel said Sunday he should not be faulted for Peterson’s actions. “You don’t measure a person’s leadership by a deputy not going in,” he said.

State. Rep. Bill Hager, R-Boca Raton, sent a letter to Gov. Rick Scott on Saturday attacking Israel for “neglect and incompeten­ce” and calling for his removal. Israel said Sunday, “Of course I won’t resign” and said the letter was “shameful” and “politicall­y motivated.”

National Rifle Associatio­n spokeswoma­n Dana Loesch, speaking Sunday on ABC’s “This Week,” also accused the sheriff ’s office of “derelictio­n of duty” and said Israel should face increased scrutiny.

David Hogg, a senior at the school, called Israel “a good man” during an interview on ABC’s “This Week” and said “he cares about the people.” But Hogg said there were breakdowns in procedures. “Were there mistakes made? Absolutely.”

More than a dozen calls were made to authoritie­s with warnings about the accused shooter, 19-yearold Nikolas Cruz, before the attack. Israel said Sunday that most of them were handled appropriat­ely but that in two of the calls “we’re not sure if deputies did everything they could have or should have.”

Israel said an internal investigat­ion into the agency’s handling of the shooting is ongoing. “We will investigat­e every action of our deputies, of our supervisor­s,” he said, “and if they did things wrong I’ll take care of business in a disciplina­ry matter, just like I did with Peterson.”

During a six-minute rampage inside the Parkland high school, police say, Cruz fatally shot 17 students and faculty before blending in with the fleeing teenagers and escaping the campus. He was taken into custody later that afternoon. He now could face a potential death sentence.

Police from the neighborin­g city of Coral Springs have said three other Broward deputies besides Peterson were waiting behind cars outside the school when they responded to the shooting. Israel said Sunday that only Peterson, then the school resource officer, was at the school during the shooting.

A spokeswoma­n for Israel’s office, in a statement released late Saturday, insisted there was “no confirmati­on, at this time, other deputies did not enter the school when they should have.” She said this claim continues to be investigat­ed.

The Coral Springs police said in a statement that they were “aware of media reports” but were not going to comment due to the ongoing investigat­ion.

The Washington Post has been unable to reach Peterson, who has not spoken publicly.

Andrew Pollack, the father of Meadow Pollack, one of the students who died in Parkland, addressed Peterson during an appearance on Fox News Sunday morning.

“There is a one deputy that worked there. Peterson. He worked there and he’s a coward,” Pollack said. “He stood by the door. I know for a fact that he could have made it to the third floor and saved all six victims, if he wasn’t some little ... Words can’t even describe the way that I think about him. But I am not trying to think about that stuff because that’s just negative and it’s just going to make me toxic.”

Some survivors of the attack have said they understand Peterson’s reluctance to go inside given that he may have been afraid, while others have expressed frustratio­n at the warning signs missed over the years.

 ?? SUN SENTINEL ?? Broward County Sheriff Scott Israel speaks at a town hall meeting on Wednesday. “I’ve given amazing leadership to this agency,” he said Sunday.
SUN SENTINEL Broward County Sheriff Scott Israel speaks at a town hall meeting on Wednesday. “I’ve given amazing leadership to this agency,” he said Sunday.

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