Las Vegas Review-Journal

Former bus driver sentenced for sexually assaulting children

- By David Ferrara Las Vegas Review-journal

A former Clark County School District special education bus driver was ordered to serve 35 years to life in prison Wednesday for sexually assaulting children on his route.

Michael Banco, 58, initially faced

41 counts, but he pleaded guilty last month to one count each of sexual assault with a minor under 16 and lewdness with a child under 14. Prosecutor­s said surveillan­ce video showed Banco sexually assaulting children who were 3 and 4 years old.

Chief Deputy District Attorney Sam Martinez referred to the crimes as

“by far the most horrific case” he has handled in 10 years as a prosecutor. In a hushed tone, District Judge Elissa Cadish called the facts “incomprehe­nsible,” shaking her head.

Even Banco’s public defender, Kathleen Hamers, said it was “obviously a horrible case, and these girls did nothing to deserve this,” while asking for a sliver of hope that he

SENTENCE

The department frequently conducts such “active shooter” drills, and schools are often used for the training since they are typically sprawling facilities that require time and painstakin­g attention to search and clear.

But the drill at Shadow Ridge took on on a special relevance in a year that has seen 22 school shootings so far, Clark County Sheriff Joe Lombardo acknowledg­ed.

“So is it a coincidenc­e we’re in a school parking lot doing an emergency management exercise? In some aspects it is, in some aspects it is not,” he said.

One of biggest trainings

Wednesday’s exercise was one of the biggest trainings Metro has conducted with other law enforcemen­t agencies, with Henderson and North Las Vegas police, the FBI, Clark County and Las Vegas fire department­s and ambulance companies participat­ing. Metro officials could not immediatel­y say how many entities or first responders took part.

Those who did were not informed of details of the scenario in advance, but it was later explained that the imaginary attack involved two shooters, one barricaded in the school theater and the other in the library. At one point, the person playing the shooter in the theater climbed onto the roof and fired fake gunshots toward members of the media gathered in the parking lot and then toward a Metro helicopter hovering overhead.

From reporters’ vantage point in the parking lot, the response appeared fairly smooth.

The campus officer sprang into action as soon as the initial burst of gunfire subsided, racing back into the school from the diversiona­ry fire to confront the threat as more police vehicles arrived. Those officers also quickly formed into strike teams and

likewise headed into the school.

As they did, streams of students who volunteere­d to take part in the exercise ran out of the building, some with ersatz bloodstain­s or noticeable limps.

Officers who are trained first to deal with the threat ran past them, though others patted down some of the students or searched their backpacks as they came out.

Phony but scary just the same

Amanda Davis, a 16-year-old who just finished sophomore year at Faith Lutheran, said she thought it’d be fun to participat­e in the drill. But even though she knew it was an exercise, the gunfire sounded scarily real as she and her friends ran from the cafeteria to the front entrance of the school.

“It was pretty loud, and it just echoed off the brick walls,” she said.

The Faith Lutheran campus is open and Davis said she has thought about how easy it might be for an assailant to get into the school. But she said having security guards on her campus helped allay her fears.

The training, which began around 10 a.m., had mostly wrapped up by 11 a.m., although EMTS continued to help the students playing the “wounded” and officers carried the “dead,” who were dummies, out of the building.

In a real shooting, the school would have been locked down all day so police could methodical­ly check the area for other possible threats and ensure no one was hiding in the building.

Instead, participat­ing agencies were to hold a “hot wash discussion,” to review what they witnessed and discuss what could be improved, said Clark County Fire Department Deputy Chief John Steinbeck, who also serves as the county’s emergency manager.

Ultimately, an in-depth report will be produced that will help inform future trainings, he said.

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