Orlando Sentinel

Parkland gunman was searched every morning

- By Megan O’Matz

The former student who later shot up Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School was such a threat in school that he was searched every morning for weapons, new testimony shows.

The extraordin­ary measure followed an earlier decision to bar Nikolas Cruz from taking a backpack to campus after he talked of suicide and wrote “kill” in a notebook.

The search procedure was revealed in a sworn deposition from Kelvin Greenleaf, the security guard who searched Cruz. The South Florida Sun Sentinel obtained a copy of the deposition this week.

“Never found a weapon on him,” Greenleaf explained in the testimony July 11. “I think we got concerned when, I think, we found out he drank bleach, tried to hurt himself or something like that, the kid. That’s when we started, like, having the kid come in every morning to be searched by me, but never found a weapon on the kid, never.”

Administra­tors forced Cruz to withdraw from Stoneman Douglas within six months — in February 2017.

He walked onto the Parkland campus a year later and fatally shot 14 students and three educators with an assault-style rifle. He’s facing the death penalty.

The district did not respond Thursday to a request for comment about Greenleaf ’s statements.

The deposition was taken as part of a wrongful death lawsuit filed by the parents of one of the dead children, Meadow Pollack. Greenleaf is not a defendant but was a key witness because of his familiarit­y with Cruz and his role as a lead security specialist.

His surprising testimony shows the school recognized the extreme danger the gun-obsessed, mentally disturbed youth posed.

“They frisked him. … They had to frisk him every day,” said Andy Pollack, father of Meadow. “They knew that he was a threat. And they subjected all the kids and my daughter to this. Where were their rights? They didn’t tell us that they’re letting a kid in the school that he’s so violent and dangerous we won’t let him in with his backpack and we have to frisk him. But they let this kid into the school with our children.”

From the start of his educationa­l path, Cruz was considered a specialnee­ds student. He had been diagnosed with attention deficit hyperactiv­ity disorder, obsessive compulsive disorder and autism.

In the deposition, Greenleaf would describe Cruz only as “different” and “weird.” He said Cruz liked to agitate classmates and was a “little prankster.”

A threat-assessment team at Stoneman Douglas banned Cruz from bringing a backpack to school after he told a classmate in September 2016 that he was depressed and drank gasoline to try to kill himself. At the same time, a counselor also became alarmed that he wrote “kill” in a notebook and talked of wanting to buy a gun within days, when he turned 18.

Greenleaf said he was instructed by Assistant Principal Jeff Morford to search Cruz every morning for weapons.

“We were watching him. But was there any — was there ever a time where I thought he would like hurt a kid on campus?” Greenleaf said. “No.”

 ?? WILFREDO LEE/AP ?? A student walks past signs outside Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School during the one-year anniversar­y of the school shooting.
WILFREDO LEE/AP A student walks past signs outside Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School during the one-year anniversar­y of the school shooting.

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