The Mercury News

Company offers situationa­l training

YouTube shooting has many Bay Area residents wondering if they should run or hide in emergency

- By Judy Peterson jpeterson@bayareanew­sgroup.com Contact Judy Peterson at 408200-1038.

Last week’s YouTube shooting has many Bay Area residents asking, “What would I do if I found myself in an active shooter situation?”

Government agencies such as the Department of Homeland Security say the best response is to run away if you can and “harden” your surroundin­gs if you can’t.

To help prepare people in the event of such a situation, a South Bay company, National Violent Intruder Preparedne­ss Solutions, recently conducted an active shooter training session in San Jose for businesses and individual­s.

“Trust your instincts,” said Los Gatos police Kerry Harris, the company’s co-founder who led the training on Tuesday. “If your instincts tell you to get away, get away.”

Harris estimated it takes anywhere from nine to 15 minutes for police to respond to an active shooter situation, equip a response team and locate and stop the shooter.

“You are on your own for the first nine to 15 minutes,” he said. “The vast majority of killing happens in the first six to nine minutes.”

That underscore­s the need for people to be prepared, Harris said, just as they prepare for earthquake­s and fires.

The FBI and the Department of Homeland Security agree that running away from a shooter is the first, best option.

Harris also pointed to a number of shooting incidents where he believes people may have lived if they’d simply run away.

“At Virginia Tech, kids dove under their desks and the shooter walked up and down the rows executing them,” Harris said. “On the second floor of one building, a professor told his students to jump out a window. There were 19 people in the room and everyone lived except the professor and a student who were holding back the door.”

Students in another room barricaded a door with desks and survived, Harris said.

There are many things that can be used to secure doors: Belts, ties, computer cables and purse straps, for instance. That’s something office workers can practice on their own, along with setting up barricades.

“If all you can do is stack stuff in front of the door it buys you time,” Harris said.

Shut off lights, draw blinds and be quiet so the shooter thinks no one is there.

He also wants people who are under attack to improvise weapons such as fire extinguish­ers to first spray the shooter, then hit him with it.

“If he comes into the room we’re going to yell, run around and throw stuff at him,” Harris said. “It makes it harder for him to get to you and he won’t be able to shoot accurately.”

Once you’ve subdued a shooter, move his weapon away, look for other weapons and pile on top of him until help arrives, Harris said.

While Harris acknowledg­ed “this is an ugly topic,” he also said his message was one of “hope and empowermen­t.”

Todd Trekell from Toeniskoet­ter Real Estate Investment and Management in San Jose said the training changed his thinking about how he’d respond to an active shooter.

“It makes you aware that you have to be mindful of your surroundin­gs and how you’d defend yourself,” Trekell said. “Before, I think my initial reaction would have been to fight, but today I learned, ideally, to get the heck out of there. If you’re boxed in, then you fight.”

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