BOMBSHELL:
Parkland Shooter Was Assigned To Obama-Era Program, Superintendent Lied, Report
Suggests
ByRyan Saavedra
@RealSaavedra
May 7, 2018
Late on Sunday night, local Florida media reported that
the gunman who shot up Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in February was
assigned to a controversial Obama-era disciplinary program which the Broward
County Public Schools superintendent previously denied existed on multiple
occasions.
WLRN reports:
Two sources with knowledge of [the shooter]’s discipline
records told WLRN he was referred to the so-called PROMISE Program for a
three-day stint after committing vandalism at Westglades Middle School in 2013.
Superintendent Robert W. Runcie implemented the PROMISE
Program in Broward County Public Schools in 2013 at the behest of the Obama
administration's efforts to reduce the number of minority students who ended up
in prison from crimes that they committed on campus.
The Daily Wire's Ben Shapiro
analyzed a report from Real Clear Investigations and wrote that Broward County
Public Schools "had rewritten its disciplinary policies to make it nearly
impossible to suspend, expel, or arrest students for behavioral problems
including criminal activity."
School district spokesperson Tracy Clark told WLRN on
Friday that administrators in the district were analyzing the shooter's records
and on Sunday they confirmed that he had been referred to PROMISE after he
vandalized a bathroom at the middle school shortly after the program was put in
place in 2013.
WLRN notes that it is not clear whether the shooter even
attended the program:
Clark said he appeared at Pine Ridge Education Center in
Fort Lauderdale — an alternative school facility where PROMISE is housed — for
an intake interview the day after the vandalism incident.
Clark told WLRN: "It does not appear that [the
shooter] completed the recommended three-day assignment/placement,"
although she wouldn't "speculate" on the reason why.
WLRN adds that the Broward County Sheriff's Office
previously said that the shooter never attended the program.
“The school board reports that there was no PROMISE
program participation,” said BSO representative Jack Dale.
Those impacted by the Parkland shooting reacted to the
news on social media by calling for Runcie's removal:
No comments:
Post a Comment