Los Angeles Times

Parkland video to be released

Media groups win suit seeking footage filmed outside Stoneman Douglas High during the mass shooting.

- By Rafael Olmeda Olmeda writes for the Sun-Sentinel.

CORAL SPRINGS, Fla. — The public should be allowed to see the security video filmed outside Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School during last month’s shooting, a judge ruled Monday. The South Florida SunSentine­l and other media organizati­ons sued the Broward County Sheriff’s Office last month for access to the video, arguing that it is crucial for the public to analyze law enforcemen­t’s response to the shooting.

Deputy Scot Peterson, the school’s resource officer, resigned after Sheriff Scott Israel criticized him for waiting outside the school as a gunman fired on students inside. The Sheriff’s Office is investigat­ing allegation­s that other deputies also waited outside.

Broward County Circuit Judge Jeffrey R. Levenson signed an order authorizin­g the video’s release but immediatel­y delayed the order until Thursday to give the Sheriff’s Office and the school board a chance to appeal.

The video reportedly does not show the gunman or any of the victims of the Feb. 14 shooting that killed 17 people.

Nikolas Cruz, 19, has been indicted on charges of murder and attempted murder. He is being held without bond at the Broward County main jail and is due in court Wednesday for arraignmen­t.

His attorneys have said he is not denying guilt but is holding off on a guilty plea in the hopes that prosecutor­s will not seek the death penalty.

School district officials, including an assistant principal from Stoneman Douglas, argued in court last week that releasing the video would expose the limits of the cameras mounted at various positions on campus, creating a security risk.

The Sheriff ’s Office indicated that Israel was in favor of releasing the video to the public but did not believe he had the authority, because it is part of an active criminal investigat­ion and an internal affairs investigat­ion into Peterson.

Dana McElroy, attorney for the media organizati­ons, including the Miami Herald and CNN, argued that the video’s release is essential for a thorough and transparen­t analysis of the law enforcemen­t response.

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