MIDDLETOWN, Conn. (AP) — A Wesleyan University student was shot and killed at a bookstore near the central Connecticut campus Wednesday afternoon, officials say, sparking a manhunt while police cautioned students and staff to remain indoors.
Officials didn’t identify the victim, but said she was a student who was at the Red and Black Cafe inside the campus bookstore, Broad Street Books.
A gun was recovered at the scene, the university said in a statement.
Police cordoned off the area around the bookstore as officers wearing camouflage and carrying automatic rifles walked the streets as onlookers gawked.
Officials at the private university notified students and faculty members by e-mail, text and voice mail about the emergency and asked them to remain inside.
Campus security update from college president Michael Roth; he notes that the library and athletic center are closed for the remainder of the day.
We can and must prevent these shootings!
Research has determined that from the Moment of Commitment (the point when a student pulls their weapon) to the Moment of Completion (when the last round is fired) is only 5 seconds. If it is the intent of institutions of higher education to react to this violence, they will do so over the wounded and/or slain bodies of students, faculty, staff and counselors.
Institutions of Higher Education clearly want safe and secure campuses. Members of student affairs are perennially queried by parents about the safety of their campuses. The commonplace answers, intended to reassure anxious parents, focus on the campus police officers and emergency procedures. While useful, these less than adequate efforts do not begin to provide a definitive answer to preventing campuses violence, nor do they make a campus safe and secure.
Traditionally institutions of higher learning have relied upon the mental health community or local police to keep them safe, yet one of the key shortcomings has been the lack of a system that involves faculty, student affairs, counselors and students in the identification and communication process. Recently, colleges, universities and community colleges have begun forming Behavioral Intervention Teams with representatives from all these constituencies. Yet, most have not.
They simply changed their safety/security policies, procedures, or surveillance systems, and they continue spending excessive amounts of money to put in place many of the physical security options. Sadly, these steps are reactionary only and do little to prevent aggression because they are designed exclusively to react to existing conflict, threat and violence. These schools reflect a national blindspot, which prefers hardening targets through enhanced security versus preventing violence with efforts directed at aggressors. Security gets all the focus and money, but this only makes us feel safe, rather than to actually make us safer.
For a comprehensive look at the problem and its solution, http://www.aggressionmanagement.com/Higher_Education/
thanks for the ad
Mr. Byrnes,
This post is nothing except an ad for your “aggression management” business. Also, since I don’t imagine you are a regular reader of librarian websites, it would seem that you Googled around looking for sites that mentioned the shooting so you could hawk your book and consulting business.
Just not right, dude.
unpossible!
Unpossible! Surely this was a gun free zone!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C0vyxgJLJVA
/sarcasm]
Well, at least they recovered the weapon, maybe cops have a chance to nail the murderer who did this.
Still hoping Texas passes campus carry, but right now that Bill is still in the calendar committee, which still hasn’t scheduled it for a vote. Grr.