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Seattle Public Schools rethink the police presence after the upswing of crime

After the students were murdered, shot, attacked and robbed, the public schools (SPS) in Seattle says that it is ready to bring the police back on campus in Seattle. But they still pull their feet and do not take responsibility for the resulting violence.

Kiro 7 reported that both SPS and the Seattle Police Department (SPD) want to return the school's resource officials (SROS) to the campus in the entire district. The program should have already started, but due to low urgency and a budget crisis, the program is behind the schedule.

Apart from the timeline, there was an immediate increase in violence after SPS moved to the Black Lives Matter Matt movement to step off the campus officers and to have taken up a curriculum that demonized the police. The district has blood in its hands and you should apologize.

Seattle Public School tries to go back anti-cop decision

During the highlight of the Power of the Black Lives Matt movement, PLC announced to boot officers from the campus. They reinforced false claims of racist police officers who aim for black and Hispanic students, and confirmed invented feelings of “complaints” by anti-cop students.

The then SPS superintendent Denise Juneau announced that the district would end the SRO program.

“In view of the current national events: the continuation of systemic racism, the murders of blacks by police officers in our country, the violence that some law enforcement officers issue here in Seattle is presented by the school authority to re-evaluate our relationship with the Seattle Police Department, and the explanation of the SEOS declaration.

But despite the following increase in violence, SPS Sros continued to stop from the campus.

After Seattle had booted public School's police officers, the students began to die

A 17-year-old student named Amarr Murphy-Paine was shot after trying to brave a fight in a parking lot of the Garfield High School. The students still mourn the 15-year-old Mobarak Adam after being shot near the campus in a bathroom of the community center. Young people exchanged shots across the street from the Rainier Beach High School, with one of the teenagers being discovered with a criminal offense without R-Rail to have a stolen vehicle.

Instead of doing the right thing and restoring order with SROS When the student criminals accused of murdering classmates.

In November 2022, after a student who shot dead at the Ingraham High School, there was a distant debate about the return of Sros on campus. Nothing came out of it.

SRO programs work

It is impossible to say how many crimes would have occurred if an SRO program were fully financed and promoted. However, we know that criminals do not commit crimes against police officers. And we know that SRO programs work.

As early as 2017, Emily Owens checked the DOJ police officers in school grants and showed that schools with financed officials recorded a decline in the mischief on campus about 1–2% and actually caught more children with drugs and weapons. After swearing out the security, you can increase security and sniff out problems with the escalates.

Fast-Forward by 2023 and Lucy Sorensens University on the Albany Research Team in massive educational department data and found that schools with SRO had about 30% fewer fights without weapons and confiscated weapons that 1.5 times higher than the schools without schools without Sie-yes, yes.

You owe an apology

SPS should not only restore an SRO program. That is a matter of course.

SPS should also apologize for the pain and suffer the decision of the district. If it hadn't been for their politically motivated decision to boot and damage police officers, we would probably have seen fewer bloodshed. We would certainly not have seen that the culture of lawlessness on campus has developed so strongly.

Will PLC apologize? Of course not. SPS has a poisonous mix of politicians and ideologues who never accept guilt and often have such important shooters that they decide not to recognize the consequences of their actions, even if they have made decisions on dead children.

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