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Parkland shooting surveillance video shows deputy remained outside

Surveillance video released Thursday showed the only armed sheriff's deputy at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, remained outside during the Feb. 14 massacre at the school, taking cover behind a wall.

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PATRICIA MAZZEI
, New York Times
FORT LAUDERDALE, FLA. — Surveillance video released Thursday showed the only armed sheriff’s deputy at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, remained outside during the Feb. 14 massacre at the school, taking cover behind a wall.

The deputy failed to confront the gunman during the six-minute rampage, the video time stamps show, confirming the account of other law enforcement officers who raised questions about the response by the sheriff’s office almost immediately after the shooting.

The 30-minute video shows former Deputy Scot Peterson flagging down another male staff member from the school at the main administration building and hopping on a golf cart to race to the freshman building. Once he is there, the footage appears to show a few students rushing outside. Peterson takes cover outside a corner of the building, behind a wall. The video has no sound.

While outside, Peterson provided frequent updates on police radio, according to a timeline provided by the sheriff’s office, including directing other officers to the building on the large campus and asking for nearby streets to be shut down.

News organizations including The New York Times had petitioned for the release of the surveillance footage, and Judge Jeffrey R. Levenson of Broward County Circuit Court ordered it be made public by noon Thursday.

Sheriff Scott Israel said that the video showed the deputy doing “nothing” as the gunman killed 14 students and three educators.

“He never went in,” the sheriff said in a news conference on Feb. 22. “There are no words,” said Israel, who described himself as “devastated, sick to my stomach” after watching the video. Office policy requires deputies to try to confront a gunman as quickly as possible, without waiting for backup.

Israel later defended his “amazing leadership,” despite Peterson’s inaction and other questionable decisions by his command staff to set up a perimeter around the school before it was clear that the shooting was over.

Peterson was suspended and then resigned his post, and in a statement released by his lawyer said that he thought the gunfire originated from outside and reacted accordingly by waiting for the suspect there. But a detailed timeline released last week by the sheriff’s office, based on radio dispatches and surveillance footage, showed Peterson said over police radio that the blasts were coming from “inside.”

Peterson also told other law enforcement officers who raced to the school to stay outside. Officers from the Coral Springs Police Department, the first to arrive on the scene, pushed into the building anyway. By then, the gunman had already fled.

Nikolas Cruz, 19, a former Stoneman Douglas High student, was later arrested about 2 miles from the school. He has been charged with 17 counts of murder and 17 counts of attempted murder in the shooting.

A student-led gun control rally on Capitol Hill in Washington, March 14, 2018. Hoping to answer demands for action a month after the massacre in Parkland, Fla., the House approved modest legislation on Wednesday that would beef up school security without changes to the nation’s gun laws. (Erin Schaff/The New York Times)

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