The Indianapolis Star

Mishawaka schools see signs of success for resource officer plan

- Greg Swiercz Email Tribune staff writer Greg Swiercz at gswiercz@sbtinfo.com Ron Wilkins Lafayette Journal & Courier USA TODAY NETWORK Reach Ron Wilkins or at rwilkins@jconline.com. Follow on Twitter: @RonWilkins­2.

MISHAWAKA – The effort to put school resource officers (SROs) in all Mishawaka schools has gained traction as School City of Mishawaka moves to fulfill its goal to enhance school safety.

Since January, there have been six new reserve police officers selected to begin duties in elementary schools. The city police department currently has one SRO at Mishawaka High School, one at John Young Middle School and one that rotated among the city’s seven elementary schools.

Kory LaBonne, director of human resources and school safety, said the assurances included in the May 2022 school referendum passed by taxpayers called for resource officers in all schools.

Soon after, however, he said, the police department began to explore a new shift structure that would put 12-hour patrol shifts into play, changing the scope and methods in bringing together the SRO plan.

The committee putting the plan together ended up with a hybrid plan, where the school district would hire a total of 10 reserve police officers — who will be trained or retrained and will have arrest powers — to staff all seven elementary schools and to eventually replace the three Mishawaka police officers currently assigned to Mishawaka

High School and John Young Middle School and the rotating SRO for elementary use.

The SROs are school district employees. People selected for the program are sworn in by the city as reserve police officers with arrest capabiliti­es, with the police department being responsibl­e for training, equipment and oversight.

In the May 2022 referendum, the district earmarked $480,000 annually for the SRO program expansion.

“It’s not uncommon for school districts to have resource officers,” LaBonne said. “I would say we probably are ahead of the curve by having one in every single one of our locations.”

While the school district’s former operating referendum addressed safety and security measures such as the installati­on of secure vestibules in many of the schools, LaBonne said the SRO program addresses what he called “the missing component” of the potential episodes or incidents of armed or active intruders.

“(Incidents) are over relatively quickly,” LaBonne said. “If we can have somebody who is armed, trained, equipped, prepared to intervene the second a concern arises, the probabilit­y of keeping students safe and secure, keeping staff safe and secure and the community safe and secure surely increases.”

The role of a resource officer also has an educationa­l component. Patrolman Emma Overton, who last week was sworn in by the Board of Public Works and Safety and just started her role as SRO at Twin Branch Elementary School, spent a lunch hour for second-graders waving and being present while the students and staff ate lunch.

“We were fortunate and exceed expectatio­ns pretty quickly in terms of not knowing about how this was going to be received by retiring officers from the police force,” LaBonne said. “Fortunatel­y, we were able to find really quality people rather quickly, and the interest was there right away.”

Staffs in the schools have been “overwhelmi­ngly positive” about having SROs in the schools, LaBonne said.

He said he recently was returning to the Administra­tion Center, which is next door to Emmons Elementary School, and saw SRO Randy Peppers enjoying lunch outside with two students.

Sgt. Mark Flemming, SRO at Liberty Elementary School, takes daily walks with a couple of students. “It sets them on the right pace for the day, giving them the right mind space. He has already moved into that mentor role.”

The early success of the Mishawaka SRO plan is something LaBonne said he hopes the district can continue for years to come.

“We hope we can leverage it to the greatest extent possible,” he said, “to ensure that all buildings, all schools, all students, all staff, all visitors are safe and secure at all times.”

DELPHI, Ind. — Delphi murder suspect Richard Allen wanted hearings schedule for next week reschedule­d to allow more time for his attorneys to prepare, but the judge has denied the request.

"The Court scheduled this hearing at counsels' request who all indicated that they would make these dates work on their respective calendars," Special Judge Frances Gull wrote in an order Friday.

After Gull refused to postpone the hearings, Allen's attorney, Brad Rozzi, filed a second motion to continue the hearing, and a third motion for Gull to disqualify herself. The latter included a request for Gull to give a written findings of facts on why she denied or approved the motion to recuse herself.

The legal angle is that, according to the defense's arguments of the law, Gull is legally restricted from ruling on any other matter in the case until she responds with a written explanatio­n to the defense's motion for her to step off the case.

Based on Rozzi's arguments, Gull must postpone the May 21, 22 and 23.

As of late Friday afternoon, Gull has not ruled on the second motion to continue the hearings or to disqualify herself, according to online court records.

The May 21, 22 and 23 hearings are to address pretrial motions about what evidence jurors will be allowed to hear at his trial. This includes whether Allen's alleged confession­s to killing Libby German and Abby Williams on Feb. 13, 2017, is admissible, as well as whether prosecutor­s can use Allen's statements to his state-appointed psychologi­st while in prison.

Gull's order indicates next week's hearings will address Allen's motion to suppress his Oct. 26, 2022, statements to investigat­ors, as well as Allen's motion for sanctions on the prosecutor. Additional­ly, Gull will hear arguments about Allen's motion to lift the safekeepin­g order that has his pretrial detention in isolation cells at maximum-security prisons.

Gull also will hear arguments on prosecutor and defense motions to exclude evidence that jurors can hear, such as Allen's defense about Odinism and ritual killings.

Gull agreed to postpone the hearing about suppressin­g Allen's alleged confession­s to prison officials and other inmates because Allen's defense team is not yet prepared.

 ?? GREG SWIERCZ/SOUTH BEND TRIBUNE ?? Mishawaka Reserve Police Officer Emma Overton is a student resource officer (SRO) at Twin Branch Elementary School. The school district and the police department have entered into an agreement to help put SROs in all the Mishawaka schools.
GREG SWIERCZ/SOUTH BEND TRIBUNE Mishawaka Reserve Police Officer Emma Overton is a student resource officer (SRO) at Twin Branch Elementary School. The school district and the police department have entered into an agreement to help put SROs in all the Mishawaka schools.
 ?? ?? Allen
Allen

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