Texarkana Gazette

Parkland father searches for answers

- By Megan O’Matz

A 19-year-old lunatic shot and killed Meadow Pollack in her school hallway. How the teen died was painfully obvious: She took nine bullets. But in a new book, her dad tries to answer: “Why?”

Andrew Pollack quickly became a national figure after the Feb. 14, 2018, Parkland massacre that ended the lives of 14 students. A teacher, football coach and athletic director also died.

Pollack channeled his anguish and fury into a public crusade to hold people accountabl­e for systemic failings in school security and in the police response.

He sued a school deputy, got a campus watchman fired, and campaigned to elect new school board members and a sympatheti­c governor. He took to Twitter, gathering up followers with the refrain: #Fixit. And he lobbied to train and arm willing guardians in schools, including teachers.

Ultimately, he teamed up with Max Eden, an education researcher at a conservati­ve-leaning New York City think tank, to write: “Why Meadow Died: the People and Policies that Created the Parkland Shooter and Endanger America’s Students.”

His conclusion: Social justice policies crafted to address bigotry and inequity have kept police and schools from arresting and disciplini­ng kids, especially disturbed kids, such as his daughter’s killer.

He is particular­ly critical of Broward County Schools Superinten­dent Robert Runcie and his school discipline policies, including the Promise program, which were designed to keep non-violent kids from being arrested for misdemeano­rs.

Pollack writes that Runcie and the school board treated questions about the policies: “with condescens­ion, and implied that parents whose children were murdered were wrongheade­d — even racist — to call for change and accountabi­lity.”

Through much of the narrative, Pollack refers to the gunman, Nikolas Cruz, by only his court case number: 18-1958, until delving into his schooling.

In his quest for answers, Pollack claims he made a deal with the killer’s lawyers. He asked that they hand over Cruz’s education records. In return, Pollack agreed to testify as a witness for the defense about how the system failed the youth.

Records show the district moved him from a special school for children with severe behavior problems — to the doomed Marjory Stoneman Douglas High.

The school system never had him arrested or sent to a psychiatri­c hospital, even though he threatened students, brought dead animals to school, used racial slurs and claimed he was suicidal.

“18-1958 was never going to be a model citizen,” Pollack writes. “but it truly took a village to raise him into a school shooter. I can’t even say he killed my daughter. They killed my daughter.”

For some, Pollack’s book will be seen through a purely political lens. He does not view gun control as the answer, unabashedl­y supports President Donald Trump and regularly rails against Democrats on social media.

Pollack lists three pages of “what ifs” — turn-of-events that could had changed the outcome on Feb. 14, 2018, if only someone had made a different decision.

The list is 42 items long.

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