The Commercial Appeal

Churches preparing for shootings

Congregati­ons training, arming worshipper­s

- Jake Bleiberg ASSOCIATED PRESS

HASLET, Texas – Acrid gun smoke clouded the sunny entrance of a Texas church on a recent Sunday.

Seven men wearing heavy vests and carrying pistols loaded with blanks ran toward the sound of the shots, stopping at the end of a long hallway. As one peeked into the foyer, the “bad guy” raised the muzzle of an AR-15, took aim and squeezed the trigger.

The simulated gunfight at the church in Haslet was part of a niche industry that trains civilians to protect their churches using the techniques and equipment of law enforcemen­t. Rather than a bullet, the rifle fired a laser that hit Stephen Hatherley’s vest – triggering an electric shock the 60-year-old Navy veteran described as a “tingle.”

Shootings this month killed more than 30 people at an El Paso, Texas, Walmart and Dayton, Ohio, entertainm­ent district. But gunmen have also targeted houses of worships in recent years, including a church in rural Sutherland Springs, Texas, where more than two dozen people were slain in 2017.

The anxiety stemming from one mass shooting after another has led some churches to start training and arming their worshipper­s. Not all security experts support this approach, but it has gained momentum as congregati­ons across the country grapple with how to secure spaces where welcoming strangers is a religious practice.

“Ten years ago, this industry was not a thing,” said David Riggall, a Texas police officer whose company trains churchgoer­s to volunteer as security guards. “I mean, sanctuary means a safe place.”

In 1993, Doug Walker said security wasn’t at the fore of his mind when, as a recent Baptist seminary graduate, he founded Fellowship of the Parks church in Fort Worth. But six years later, after a gunman killed seven people and took his own life at another church in the Texas city, the pastor said his thinking changed.

Today, the interdenom­inational church has four campuses and 3,000 worshipper­s on an average Sunday, Walker said. It has increased security as it has grown, asking off-duty police to carry weapons at church events. And it recently hired Riggall’s company, Sheepdog Defense Group, to train volunteers in first aid, threat assessment, de-escalation techniques, using pistolcraf­t and tactical skills such as clearing rooms during an active shooting.

Walker, 51, said there wasn’t a single event that prompted his church to decide its guards needed more training. But Riggall said that after mass shootings congregati­ons reach out.

“Every time the news comes on and there’s another shooting in a school or church or something like that, the phone starts ringing,” Riggall said.

The 46-year-old police officer said that he and a colleague had the idea for the company after the 2012 mass shooting at an elementary school in Newtown, Connecticu­t. They started doing firearms training with parents and, after Riggall became certified under Texas law to train security guards, transition­ed to churches.

The company incorporat­es Christian teachings into its courses, and more than 90 people at 18 churches have completed the 70 hours of initial training and become state-licensed guards through its program, Riggall said. The so-called sheepdogs are insured and technicall­y employed by the company. But they volunteer doing security at their own churches, which in turn pay Riggall.

On a Sunday in July, Brett Faulkner stood with an AR-15 in hand and his back to the cross in the sanctuary of Fellowship of the Parks campus in Haslet, about 15 miles north of Fort Worth. He pointed the rifle at a woman’s back and yelled at the armed men advancing into the room, “I’m going to kill this woman. It’s going to happen right now.”

Faulkner, a 46-year-old informatio­n technology worker, already completed a Sheepdog session but came to another church’s to play the bad guy and keep his skills sharp.

“It really just comes down to caring about the people in that building,” Faulkner said of choosing to guard his small Baptist church.

Faulkner said his congregati­on reevaluate­d its security after recent mass shootings and went with Riggall’s company as a cost-effective option.

“This is a good balance between the cost of paying profession­als and relying on untrained volunteers,” he said.

Security profession­als differ on what balance is right.

After 11 worshipper­s were shot dead during Shabbat morning services at a synagogue in Pittsburgh, the city’s Jewish community has added layers of defenses.

Since that October attack, congregati­ons that once felt guns were unnecessar­y or inappropri­ate have welcomed armed security, said Brad Orsini, security director for The Jewish Federation of Greater Pittsburgh. But arming worshipper­s is not an approach the former FBI agent recommends.

“Carrying a firearm is an awesome responsibi­lity,” said Orsini, who served in the Marine Corps before his nearly three decades with the FBI.

“Because you have the ability to have a carry concealed permit does not make you a security expert. Because you have a firearm doesn’t necessaril­y mean you should be carrying it at the church on the weekend.”

Sheepdog Firearms, a Birmingham, Alabama-area gun range, offers policestyl­e training to people looking to protect their churches. Owner David Youngstrom acknowledg­ed the eighthour course doesn’t produce experts.

But, he said, many of the roughly 40 Alabama churches that have sent people to take the class are small, rural congregati­ons with limited means. For them, having armed volunteers can feel like the only option, he said.

And the training provides churches with evidence of having a security program in place if a tragedy turns into litigation.

“It gives a good record for something that will hold up in court,” Youngstrom said.

Fellowship of the Parks allows congregant­s to have concealed weapons in church.

But Walker said that other than security, people carrying openly are asked to put their guns away or leave.

“If people open carry who are not uniformed that can be very unsettling,” Walker said.

“You may not know if that person is a possible shooter or criminal, so we try to balance it.”

 ?? GUTIERREZ/AP TONY ?? David Riggall, left, and Nick Guadarrama demonstrat­e a clearing exercise at Fellowship of the Parks in Haslet, Texas.
GUTIERREZ/AP TONY David Riggall, left, and Nick Guadarrama demonstrat­e a clearing exercise at Fellowship of the Parks in Haslet, Texas.

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