Crime & Safety

Video: Santee Sheriff's Station Leads Shooter and Hostage Drills at Grossmont College

Squads of sheriff's deputies and other law enforcement agencies serving East County practiced what they would do in the event of an emergency situation on the campus.

It was "College for Cops" at Grossmont College on Tuesday. Squads of sheriff’s deputies and sworn personnel from other law enforcement agencies serving East County, including Santee stationed officers, practiced what they would do in the event of an emergency situation on the campus.

As news media and college officials watched, officers practiced what they would do in an active shooter situation, how they would respond if students were taken hostage, and what measures they would take if an officer were wounded and on the ground.

The three scenarios unfolded one right after another, simulating the confusion and tumult that might occur if the horrible situations had been real.  Grossmont College students had been alerted in advance to not be alarmed by the law enforcement drill, and also to keep their distance so as not to interfere with it.  In the simulation, teenagers from the sheriff’s Explorer’s unit played the role of frightened students who suddenly were confronted by a gunman in their classroom.

The drills began shortly after 2 p.m. when a deputy involved in the scenario began firing blank rounds from a mock firearm.  Alerted to the gunman’s whereabouts, a team of deputies in protective formation advanced toward the gunman, who fled. The deputies followed and confronted him.

Explaining the drill, Melissa Aquino of the Sheriff’s Public Affairs unit said, the teams will be “practicing how they would track down a gunman. After neutralizing the threat, deputies will check the classrooms and proceed with evacuation procedures.”

“An active shooter by definition is someone who displays the ability and willingness to shoot people indiscriminately without regard to his or her safety. It’s a scenario that no one wants to think about, but law enforcement is ready to respond in the event a real emergency occurs," she said.  

The purpose was to practice positions in entering and clearing a room, communication via radio or hand signals, locating and removing victims, providing security for paramedics, finding evacuation routes, establishing a rescue plan and what to do when a team member is down.

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Unit after unit of sheriff’s deputies, El Cajon police officers, and California Highway Patrol officers ran through the scenario, one after another, in the exercise that had been scheduled from 2 p.m. to 10 p.m. on Tuesday, and will be repeated during the same hours on Thursday. The Santee Sheriff Station led the exercises. Evaluators took notes, and gave feedback to the various teams.

Among the college officials monitoring the exercise were Chancellor Cindy Miles of the two-college Grossmont-Cuyamaca Community College District and Grossmont College President Sunita V. Cooke, as well as Dean Agustin Albarran, whose division includes English and the Social and Behavioral Sciences. 

Dean Albarran said that the drill was useful to Grossmont College because it familiarized law enforcement officers with the campus, while giving college officials some experience in what to expect had this been a real emergency.

A Grossmont College press release contributed to this post.


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