Multiple Victim Stabbing at Miami-Jacobs Career College Demonstrates the need for Schools to Take Edged Weapons Assaults Seriously

A man armed with multiple knifes walked into the admissions office of the Miami-Jacobs Career College in Columbus, Ohio and stabbed a person. At that point, bystanders attempted to subdue and disarm the man who then responded by producing an additional edged weapon. By the time responding police shot the man, four people had been injured, three of them critically.

Stabbings on K-12 and higher education campuses occur much more frequently than attacks with firearms but most do not involve multiple victims. We have found this to be true not only in our work in the United States but in our work in other countries as well. At the same time, there have thus far been at least two knife attacks in schools in the People’s Republic of China where at least 25 people have been stabbed. School stabbing rampages have also occurred in other countries such as Japan.

While edged weapons incidents are far more prevalent on school campuses than other types of weapons incidents, we have found that very few educational employees have received any instruction or training on what to do about them.   Even fewer have ever participated in drills and exercises to practice the action steps that need to be implemented to counter people who are threatening to use a knife or have actually used an edged weapon to attack others.  One reason for this is the over emphasis on catastrophic but extremely rare active shooter situations at schools.  While it is critical that employees and students be provided information and practice on these deadly situations, this should not be to the exclusion of other dangerous and more common types of school weapons incidents.

For example, our analysts have conducted one-on-one structured simulation interviews using both scripted and video school crisis scenarios with more than 500 school employees in the past several years. We have found that on average, only 1 out of every 100 interviewed participants can properly respond to a scenario of an angry parent who is brandishing a knife. While most school staff can verbalize the correct procedures for a person who is firing a gun, they typically cannot handle a person with a knife. As yesterday’s savage attack demonstrates, a person who has an edged weapon and a desire to use the weapon on a school campus can create devastating damage in a matter of seconds.

As with medical emergencies, tornadoes, fires and any other category of school crisis events, school crisis plans, training and drills should prepare employees to adapt to any situation that occurs, not just those types of events that garner intensive media coverage.   A comprehensive approach to school safety and crisis planning can reduce danger to school employees, visitors and students.

Can a Hacker Gain Access to Security Camera Feed, Alarm System Controls or Student Information through your Smart Phones?

Guest blog by Phuong Nguyen SHI Public Information Officer

  

smart phones used by school officials can be used by hackers and cyber criminals to access sensitive information such as student records and alarm system controls

Could your smart phones be a weak link in your cyber security strategy?

Due to the number and severity of cyber attacks on school systems, there is increasing concern among school leaders about the techniques used by hackers and other cyber criminals to access sensitive information, commit thefts and to perform denial of service attacks.

One area of considerable interest involves the amount of information that can sometimes be accessed by hacking into smart phones and how easy it can sometimes be to breach the security of these devices. For example, in many school districts and non-public schools today, authorized employees can remotely view live feed from security cameras, can turn major systems like freezers in a cafeteria and alarm systems on and off. In many school organizations, authorized employees can quickly access sensitive student records from a portable device.

In polling a number of school safety officials, we have found that most of them have not installed any protective software on their employees’ smart phones, including those that can be used to access these types of systems. According to cyber security experts, with available tools, hackers just need to be within the wireless coverage range of those mobile devices to compromise them. For example, as many people often use the unsecure Wi-Fi hotspots available in public places, such as airports, hackers just need to be in those places to accomplish their malicious work. If password information has been stored on a phone that is used to access these systems and appropriate protective software is not in use, a hacker may be able to access anything that the legitimate user can.

We suggest that school organizations that utilize these types of systems consider protection of these mobile devices by installing appropriate antivirus software, developing appropriate use policies as they would for desktop computers, and providing proper staff development sessions for those who have access to these systems via portable device. As the recent successful hacking of a conference call between FBI officials and Scotland Yard investigators demonstrate, there are people who can and will hack telephone calls.

School cyber security is a rapidly evolving and often vulnerable area. Taking reasonable steps to protect these sensitive systems and information should be a consideration.

Phuong Nguyen serves as the Public Information Officer for Safe Havens International and is working on a dual Cyber Security/MBA MS degree program. Phuong has an MA in Applied Linguistics from Vietnam National University and an MA in Mass Communications from Texas Tech University.

15 Reported Injuries in Pennsylvania School Bus Crash

Local news agencies are reporting that approximately 15 people were injured when a school bus from the Turkeyfoot Area School District in Pennsylvania was involved with a crash with a commercial truck.

Early media reports indicate that some students were airlifted to hospitals while others were reportedly transported to the hospital by ambulance and via school bus. The crash occurred at about 2:45 P.M. EST. This is the second mass casualty school bus crash in the state in the past two years.

Safe Havens International Video produced a school mass casualty event mental health recovery training video featuring Safe Havens Analyst Dr. Sonayia Shepherd last year. 1,000 copies of the video, which won a Telly Award, have been distributed at no cost to Pennsylvania schools to help them prepare for such events.