The Palm Beach Post

Ex-deputy denies that he’s a coward

Attorney says officer believed shooting was taking place outside.

- By Jorge Milian Palm Beach Post Staff Writer

PARKLAND — The Broward County sheriff ’s deputy who failed to enter Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School when the Feb. 14 mass shooting began says he’s not a “coward” and that his actions that day “were appropriat­e under the circumstan­ces,” according to a statement from the deputy’s attorney.

Scot Peterson, a sheriff ’s deputy for more than three decades, resigned from BSO last week after he was suspended without pay by Sheriff Scott Israel for not entering the building where Nikolas Cruz used an AR-15 assault rifle to kill 14 students and three staff members and injure a dozen more.

Israel said Peterson waited outside the building for four minutes while Cruz, 19, sprayed gunfire in hallways and inside several classrooms.

In the statement, Peterson indicates he didn’t enter the building because he thought the shooting was taking place outside.

“Let there be no mistake, Mr. Peterson wishes that he could have prevented the untimely passing of the seventeen victims on that day . ... ,” according to the statement released by attorney Joseph A. DiRuzzo. “However, the allegation­s that Mr. Peterson was a

coward and that his performanc­e, under the circumstan­ces, failed to meet the standards of police officers are patently untrue.”

In the statement, the former deputy “heard gunshots but believed those gunshots were originatin­g from outside of the buildings on the school campus,” causing him to take a “tactical position” in a corridor.

“BSO trains its officers that in the event of outdoor gunfire one is to seek cover and assess the situation in order to communicat­e what one observes with other law enforcemen­t,” that statement said.

That’s a contradict­ion to comments made by Israel on Friday when he said that deputies are instructed to engage active shooters immediatel­y, even if backup help is not available.

“I am devastated,” Israel said during the news conference. “Sick to my stomach. He never went in.”

Israel added that Peterson should have gone inside the building and “killed the killer.”

Israel’s comments about Peterson’s actions are a “gross oversimpli­fication” of the events that took place during the Valentine’s Day attack, the statement reads. The twopage statement lists 12 bullet points with “facts” that Israel “convenient­ly omitted.”

Those points include radio transmissi­ons that indicated a gunshot victim near the school’s football field, confirming Peterson’s belief “that the shooter, or shooters, were outside” and Peterson’s “presence of mind” to have school administra­tors check closed-circuit video to locate the shooter. Cruz was able to escape with students fleeing the carnage and was not taken into custody for more than an hour after the shootings.

The statement ends by criticizin­g Israel’s handling of Peterson, admonishin­g the sheriff because he “jumped to a conclusion” without allowing an investigat­ion by the Florida Department of Law Enforcemen­t to be completed.

Video and eyewitness testimony will show that Peterson’s response was appropriat­e and will “exonerate him of any sub-par performanc­e,” the statement said.

Peterson has become a target of condemnati­on nationally.

President Donald Trump has called Peterson a “coward” and said Monday that the former deputy “thought he was probably a brave guy, but he wasn’t a brave guy under pressure. He choked and other people choked.”

Trump went on to say that, unlike Peterson, he would have run into the school building “even if I didn’t have a weapon ... ”

Gov. Rick Scott told USA Today on Monday that Peterson’s decision not to confront Cruz was “horrible.”

According to records obtained from The Palm Beach Post, Peterson had a strong work history at the sheriff ’s office. Peterson was named school resource officer of the year in 2015 and had “glowing” performanc­e reviews, the statement said.

Citing state law, BSO said it is forbidden to rebut the statement from Peterson’s attorney because the ex-deputy is the subject of an ongoing internal affairs investigat­ion.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States