Los Angeles Times

Why was this officer hired?

-

Re “Officer who killed woman is fired,” Oct. 7

The killing of Mona Rodriguez by a sworn school “safety officer” in Long Beach was wholly avoidable.

The Long Beach Board of Education mulls over de-escalation training and mediation but is silent on improved screening during the hiring process.

According to your article, Officer Eddie F. Gonzalez was removed from employment in Los Alamitos after 90 days on that city’s police force. After that, he was removed by the Sierra Madre Police Department before he had completed a year on the job.

Aren’t these red flags? It seems that the Long Beach school board needs to take a hard look into its background check process.

Nanette Pastor-Hanna

Redondo Beach

Instead of pushing for the removal of armed presence on campus, we should first question why our officers are not able to keep our children safe.

In the U.S., new officers spend on average only 840 hours, or 21 weeks, on training, according to the U.S. Department of Justice. Of that, 168 hours are spent on firearms, self-defense and use of force, while only 10 hours are spent on mental illness. Most forces do not require their sworn personnel to undergo conflict management training.

As a social work graduate student, I am required to have 3,000 hours of supervised experience before I can even apply for a license in most states.

If we require officers to use good judgment in highstress situations, then 840 hours of training is not enough. We need to start pushing for better de-escalation, community building and anti-bias training.

Joey Ngai

Lawrencevi­lle, Ga.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States