Safety & Security
Breaching Locked Doors
Twelve nationally and
internationally experienced school
safety experts performed a detailed
post-incident evaluation of the 2013 active
shooter and arson attack at Arapahoe High
School, in Centennial, Colo., as part of an arbitration
process. Littleton Public School District
leaders, who requested the evaluation, were
far more open and forthright in answering our questions than has
been typical of other active shooter cases we have worked. At the
beginning of the investigation, the district agreed that the final report
would be released for wide public dissemination
so other school officials could learn from
any lessons gleaned in the process. The review
team logged more than 1,300 staff hours while
reviewing over 10,000 pages of documents, conducting
interviews and site visits. The resulting
81-page report identifies valuable lessons
learned and can be downloaded at safehavensinternational.org.
Confusion about keys and damage to the facility
Many schools rely on Knox boxes containing only one or two
keys to allow emergency responders to rapidly open locked doors
during rescue and clearing operations. Arapahoe High School
had Knox boxes, and district operations personnel provided
additional master keys to responding law enforcement officers.
However, in the confusion of the event, problems with keys were
encountered. The speed of the attack, the use of both a firearm
and Molotov cocktails by the attacker, the size and complexity
of the school design, the massive number of responding law
enforcement officers and the tactics used by officers conducted
the clearing operations created challenges. For example, three
different teams where designated to sweep every square foot of
the school in turn. Officers used a door marking system to ensure
that every room was cleared three times. The decision was
made for officers to use firefighters’ Halligan Tools to rip open
a large number of doors because the keys did not get to some of
the officers who needed them. Though officers followed training
concepts and were naturally focused on finding any additional
attackers, the breaching of doors caused significant physical and
emotional damage that might have been avoided.
Trauma caused by rescue efforts
Compounding the physical damage were two challenges
relating to the mental health needs of students and staff. The
after-action review of the district’s recovery efforts revealed that
many students and staff reported being more frightened by the
clearing teams ripping doors open than they were from the sounds
of gunfire during the attack. As teachers had been trained that
responding officers would use keys to open doors, many assumed
the sounds were being made by attackers. The recovery team
requested that the district’s facilities personnel rapidly repair
damage to the school from the attacker’s shotgun blasts, replace
the damaged doors and doorframes, remove
the door markings and repair damage from a
fire in the library set by the attacker. In a truly
amazing and commendable effort, the district’s
facility’s team worked with a mitigation firm to
make this request a reality.
Lives were saved but lessons learned
The report documents how the school’s emergency preparedness
measures prevented this well-planned attack by a deeply
troubled, heavily armed and intelligent student from becoming the
mass casualty event he envisioned in his diary. While an innocent
student was brutally murdered by the attacker, the amazingly fast
and effective response of school staff combined with the presence
of a school resource officer at the school denied him the opportunity
to kill the large number of victims the former eagle scout
desired when he planned his attack over a three-month time span.
Advance planning for proper key control under crisis conditions
is also important. Littleton Public Schools had to rekey a
number of locks because some of the seven keys they provided to
law enforcement officers were not returned. In another example,
one of our analysts found a grand master key to a school in a parking
lot in the police staging area after a full-scale active shooter
exercise in Oregon.
These situations demonstrate the need for thoughtful discussions
between school and public safety officials. While proximity
card systems can make this easier for some doors, officers will
need access to all interior doors. The ability of responding police
to rapidly obtain adequate numbers of master keys and printed
floorplans can prevent significant property damage, minimize
emotional trauma and could even save human life.
This article originally appeared in the issue of .
About the Author
Michael Dorn serves as the executive director for Safe Havens International, Inc., an IRS-approved, nonprofit safety center. He has authored and co-authored more than 20 books on campus safety. He can be reached through the Safe Havens website at www.safehavensinternational.org.