The Denver Post

Ex-elementary school still vital teaching tool

- By Peyton Garcia

There is a new school in town, but it’s not full of children with backpacks and pencils. It’s a school for law enforcemen­t officers with guns, learning how to stop school shootings.

Nearly two decades after the tragic shootings at Columbine High School and an alarming number of other deadly attacks in schools across the country, the Frank DeAngelis Center for Community Safety, once known as Martensen Elementary School, was unveiled in Wheat Ridge last week. The site now offers a oneof-a-kind authentic environmen­t for first responders to train with active school-shooter simulation­s — like the one Wheat Ridge police Officer Tyler Fashempour encountere­d Friday.

Fashempour is in a dark, empty classroom. He has a gun trained on a man straight ahead of him, who has one arm in the air and the

other by his side, his hand obscured by items on a table next to him.

“Show us both of your hands, sir,” demands Fashempour. The suspect disregards the order. His obscured hand twitches furtively, and without warning he whips it into view, pointing something silver and shiny at the officer.

Fashempour fires a shot, and the suspect hits the ground.

The lights in the room come on, and the table and suspect fade to black as the simulation comes to an end. Fashempour lowers his fake gun and turns to his trainer, Darrel Smith, patrol commander with Security and Emergency Management for the Jefferson County Public School District, who sits at a desk in the corner of the room during this training session and shows Fashempour that the item in the suspect’s hand was a staple gun.

Once part of the Jefferson County Public School District, Martensen closed in 2011 because of budget cuts and sat empty for two years. In 2013, the school came back to life under the direction of John McDonald, executive director of security and emergency management, for use by police department­s and other first-responder agencies across the nation.

Martensen was officially dedicated last Wednesday as a training facility at an open house ceremony. The building’s new name honors former Columbine High School principal Frank DeAngelis, who led the high school through the 1999 shooting there.

McDonald has worked for four years to remodel the abandoned school, including covering the building’s forest green exterior with a coat of police blue.

“This building is a reminder of all those lives that were lost and all those lives that we will save in the future,” McDonald said at the center’s open house. “This will continue to be a place of education. The students are just different — now they are first-responders.”

The center has welcomed a variety of agencies, including SWAT and the Navy SEALs, to use the classrooms, still crowded with desks, for training authentici­ty.

“One of the biggest challenges we have in law enforcemen­t is that it’s hard for us to find locations to do tactical training,” said Wheat Ridge Police Chief Dan Brennan. “It’s a pretty dynamic exercise, cops have real guns, they go through tactics to approach, search, assess victims for medical attention and try to neutralize the suspect.”

In 2013, law enforcemen­t throughout Jefferson County requested the use of a school building for training purposes 42 times, but it wasn’t easy getting into one.

“It was tough to get a school because they’re always in use,” McDonald said. “So you go to an empty warehouse and they’d be like, ‘Pretend this wall’s there, and pretend that’s not there,’ and it’s difficult to get a realistic training out of that.”

A donation from Ti Training Corp., which specialize­s in law enforcemen­t training simulation­s, allowed McDonald to add an interactiv­e use-of-force simulator.

But the simulator isn’t just shooting practice — in some of the available scenarios, trainees are able to de-escalate the situation verbally. It’s all about exposing inexperien­ced responders to complex interactio­ns and teaching them to handle dangerous situations in the best manner possible.

“A lot of people look at it and think it’s a shoot, don’t shoot type thing … but it’s so much more than that,” Smith said. “If you take it deeper than that, we’re not so worried about did they use OC (pepper spray)? But, how did they de-escalate the person on the screen in the scenario?”

The simulator’s scenarios, which are filmed with live actors, also include domestic violence situations and confrontat­ions with mentally ill individual­s. Some of the films used are based on actual school shootings.

“It’s really realistic once you get into it,” Fashempour said. “Once you go through it a few times, you start to see it as a real-life scenario. It’s a great training tool. For me, my heart rate goes up a little bit.”

Written on a wall inside one of the center’s training rooms is a list of eight Colorado school shootings. Below it reads, “19 deceased and 29 wounded in Colorado School shootings … We will never forget so we prepare to respond today for tomorrow.”

 ??  ?? Wheat Ridge police Officer Charlotte Aines goes through a “shoot, don’t shoot” scenario while training with help from a simulator at the Frank DeAngelis Center for Community Safety in Wheat Ridge. Andy Cross, The Denver Post
Wheat Ridge police Officer Charlotte Aines goes through a “shoot, don’t shoot” scenario while training with help from a simulator at the Frank DeAngelis Center for Community Safety in Wheat Ridge. Andy Cross, The Denver Post
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