Los Angeles Times

Teacher apologizes for classroom gun incident

In impromptu speech at a council meeting, Dennis Alexander thanks community for its support.

- By Corina Knoll and Alene Tchekmedyi­an corina.knoll @latimes.com Twitter: @corinaknol­l alene.tchekmedyi­an @latimes.com Twitter: @alenetchek

The Monterey County high school teacher who accidental­ly fired a gun during a lecture on “public safety awareness” has publicly apologized for the classroom incident that injured three students.

Dennis Alexander, who also serves as mayor pro tem of Seaside, made an impromptu speech Thursday at a regularly scheduled City Council meeting filled with hundreds of supporters.

“I want to apologize from the bottom of my heart,” Alexander said in footage aired by local news outlet KSBW. “I can’t find the words to say how sorry I am.”

Since the Tuesday afternoon incident, the community has rallied around the teacher and Sand City reserve police officer.

“We are his family, and we are here to protect what is ours,” said one student at the public comment session that, according to Seaside City Clerk Lesley MiltonReri­g, lasted for two hours.

“There was such an outpouring of support,” MiltonReri­g said. “The council chamber was filled with students and signs, inside and outside. There was nothing on the agenda that would have related to that in any way, but [Alexander] asked the mayor if he could comment.”

Alexander, who has served on the council for eight years, thanked those who have stayed in his corner throughout the ordeal.

“It helps a lot. It gets me through the day,” he said.

The Seaside High School website lists Anderson as an educator in the career and technical department responsibl­e for introducto­ry classes on fire and police, as well as public safety.

KSBW reported that Alexander fired his service revolver, a Glock 21 semi-automatic .45-caliber pistol.

Alexander was “attempting to ensure a weapon was safe and free of any bullets” when he pointed it toward the ceiling and inadverten­tly fired a round, Seaside Police Chief Abdul Pridgen said Wednesday.

Officers were called to the school about 1:20 p.m.

Three students, 16 and 17 years old, sustained minor injuries — cuts and scrapes — when they were struck by bullet fragments or ceiling debris, Pridgen said. Seaside police said in a news release that no one was seriously injured.

One student had a cut near his eye, while another had a cut on his neck. A third student’s arm had some inflammati­on.

One of the students was taken by his parents to a hospital.

Alexander, who Pridgen said has taught this safety class in the past, did not respond to a request for comment.

It’s unclear whether he will face charges. Pridgen said detectives will present the results of their investigat­ion to the Monterey County district attorney’s office.

The incident came a day before tens of thousands of students across the country staged a historic national walkout to push political leaders to take action to prevent gun violence on and off campuses. The walkout was in response to the killing of 17 people by a gunman at a Parkland, Fla., high school.

 ?? David Royal Associated Press ?? WHILE teaching a safety class, Dennis Alexander accidental­ly fired a Glock 21 pistol into the ceiling.
David Royal Associated Press WHILE teaching a safety class, Dennis Alexander accidental­ly fired a Glock 21 pistol into the ceiling.

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