The American Spectator

home
ADVERTISEMENT
Print Email
Text Size

The Spectacle Blog

Collins on Columbine

Today is the tenth anniversary of the Columbine shootings, and it's worth re-asking the questions our Reid Collins posed on April 7 in the wake of the Binghamton murders. His American Spectator column of that date, "Columbine Plus," contained much information not known to the public. Who was aware of the police chiefs pre-Columbine "IARD" program of instruction or their recommendation of a small force for rapid deployment in each force? Or the federal program ASTITP on dealing with "active shooters"? Did the Binghamton police? The cops at Virginia Tech? Why not? There's still every reason to learn from Columbine and its successors. Here's Reid Collins again:

Columbine Plus

It was ten years ago. April 20, 1999, two students walked into the school they attended, Columbine High School, in Jefferson County, Colorado, and proceeded to kill 12 students, a teacher and finally, themselves. They had plenty of time in which to do it.

Scores of law enforcement officers surrounded the school. Apache-like, they stalked around the building as some surviving students made it out of the place on their own. They were employing an age-old police method: "time, talk, and tactics." Trouble is, the killers used the time to finish their deadly work.

The International Association of Chiefs of Police had initiated a new training program in the mid-nineties, dubbed "IARD" -- Immediate Action Rapid Deployment. Under its regimen there'd be no time for talk: well-armed officers would burst into a hostage site prepared to dispatch what had become known as an "Active Shooter." There even evolved a federal corollary known of course by a longer title, "Active Shooter Threat Instructor Training Program," or ASTITP.

The gist of the new tactic, to heavily arm and heavily protect lawmen who would not wait to assess the threat situation, but would act immediately to enter premises and stop murder. The Police Chiefs said up-front this would be costly: arming an officer with an automatic weapon, an AR-15 preferred, suitable protective armor, and a bag of ammo and assorted implements, would cost an estimated $5,000. Perhaps that is why "active shooters" still have leisure time ticking away at their deadly sites.

Authorities in Binghamton, New York, insist a couple of hours was not too long to discover the thanatoid scene in the Immigrant Ed Building. Little has been said of the responsiveness to the Virginia Tech massacre (after all, the killer had chained a door shut, hadn't he?).

And there are of course situations where police are ambushed on what seemed to be a routine domestic trouble call -- Pittsburgh.

But the rash of recent multiple slayings calls to mind the grim anniversary of Columbine and the question for every precinct in the nation: are you ready? Can you answer an active shooter threat with immediate action deployment? Do you have a swift swat capacity of trained and equipped officers?

Never mind how many. It's how fast.

View all comments (3) | Leave a comment

Ran| 4.20.09 @ 4:41PM

TAS:
The media focuses on Columbine. Fine.

Is there then a compelling need to recall and evaluate the events at Ruby Ridge, Idaho? Waco, Texas?

Ruby Ridge: August 22, 1992

Waco: February 28, 1993

Evan Long| 4.22.09 @ 1:02AM

According to the 30K+ pages of government files related to the Columbine attack, a flood of corroborating eyewitnesses described in detail or outright named other shooters to police, who eventually came to endorse the alibis of the accused. This entire story, of course, remained a secret for years with the help of the media, which knew it but didn't publish it. The other reported shooters included other CHS students in the trench coat group and an unidentified adult, about eight or so total. Ten years later, we are still debating about who were Harris and Klebold and why they masterminded a shooting but what if that's only a tiny portion of what actually happened? You can find a presentation about this information at http://www.xmail.net/evanlong/tcc/ or http://www.TheColumbineCause.tk/

jojo| 1.11.10 @ 2:50AM

nike shoes outlet
adidas shoes outlet

Leave a Comment

N.B. We encourage readers to share and discuss their thoughtful and relevant comments about this Spectator article. Comments are routinely monitored and will be deleted if profane, bigoted, or grossly impolite. Please be respectful. (And don't feed the trolls!) Thank you.

http://spectator.org/blog/2009/04/20/collins-on-columbine

ADVERTISEMENT

SPONSORED LINKS

Special Feature

Better that we become a nation of choosers rather than beggars. Our symposium on choice from the May, 2012 issue:

A Time for Choosing

James Piereson

The Road from Serfdom

Stephen Moore and Peter Ferrara

FLASHBACK TO: 1984

Clip of the Day

Most Popular Articles

Meet the Flukes!

F. H. Buckley | 5.25.12

The Wisconsin Turning Point

Peter Ferrara | 5.23.12

In Search of Muhammad

Aymenn Jawad Al-Tamimi | 5.25.12

Age and Kyl

Quin Hillyer | 5.25.12

Follow Me

Jay D. Homnick | 5.25.12

A Test of National Honor

Hal G.P. Colebatch | 5.25.12

How About the Record of DOE Capital?

William Tucker | 5.25.12

The Great Debate

R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr. | 5.24.12

ADVERTISEMENT