The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

House of worship increase vigilance

In wake of attacks, expert urges sites to have armed security.

- By Shelia M. Poole spoole@ajc.com and Jennifer Brett jbrett@ajc.com

At New Birth Missionary Baptist Church, security begins in the parking lot.

Antonio Render, the megachurch’s security consultant and a former DeKalb County police officer, said outside security guards are trained to look for unusual behavior or unattended packages and bags.

“The church is God’s house, but we still have to put thought into security measures to make sure we are protected,” he said. “This is just what is going on now. When I went to church as a young man, our churches would leave the doors open. You could go in a church 24 hours a day. We never thought any-

one would come in and cause bodily harm to anyone. You can’t do that now.”

The issue of safety at houses of worship is back in the headlines following Saturday’s mass shooting at the Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh. But many clerical leaders have been re-evaluating and beefing up security for some time now. They all should, says Jimmy Meeks, a former police officer who now leads security seminars at houses of worship.

“What does surprise me is it doesn’t happen every day, because of the degree of anger among so many people,” he said of the Pittsburgh attack, which left 11 people dead and others injured. Suspect Robert Bowers is charged with 11 counts of criminal homi- cide and 13 counts of ethnic intimidati­on.

“We lost 114 people last year. That’s a new record in deaths on faith-based properties,” Meeks said.

Meeks was leading a secu- rity seminar over the week- end when he learned of the Pittsburgh massacre. His main advice in the wake of this and other attacks: be vigilant and have armed security in place.

“As heaven is my witness, I am not a gun fanatic,” Meeks said. “But if you don’t have armed security, you don’t have a chance against these armed individual­s when they come in to kill.”

Georgia law says licensed holders may carry their guns into a church or religious building, but only with per- mission from the church.

“I believe every church is free to do what they need to do within the realm of the law,” Meeks said. “Having a church full of armed people, that’s not necessaril­y a good thing.”

An armed response may have kept a September 2017 shooting in Tennessee at a Nashville-area church from being more deadly. Emanuel K. Samson is accused of killing one person and injur- ing several others at the Bur- nette Chapel Church of Christ. He accidental­ly shot himself after he was confronted by an armed member of the congregati­on, the Nashville Tennes- sean reported.

Meeks noted that not all mass shootings at houses of worship were motivated by religious enmity.

Devin Patrick Kelley quar- reled with his mother-in-law and sent her threatenin­g text messages before showing up at her Sutherland Springs, Texas, church in November 2017. He fatally shot 26 peo- ple and turned the gun on himself after a former NRA firearms instructor who lived near the church exchanged fire, then chased Kelley down the road.

Several Georgia p olice department­s offer active- shooter training or advice to churches. Some churches contract with private security agencies or invest in state-ofthe-art security systems.

One local church doesn’t allow bags larger than a backpack, while others urge lead- ers to keep a cellphone handy in case they need to call 911.

Edward Ahmed Mitchell, executive director of the Geor- gia chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations, said every mosque has a dif- ferent level of security. Some keep their doors locked at all times, requiring people enter-

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