School Safety Officer Terminated Following Student Death

A Long Beach, Calif., school safety officer has been fired after discharging his firearm in an incident that left an 18-year-old mother brain-dead. According to bystander video and news sources, on Monday, Sept. 27, former officer Eddie F. Gonzalez fired two shots at a car leaving a parking lot following a verbal altercation between teenagers. One of the bullets struck Mona Rodriguez, 18, in the head. Rodriguez’s family pulled her off life support on Tuesday, Oct. 5.

On Wednesday, Oct. 6, the Long Beach Unified School District’s school board voted unanimously to terminate Gonzalez. News sources report that Gonzalez had been hired in January after short tenures at several different police departments. The official cause of termination was violation the district’s use-of-force policy. A district spokesperson also confirmed that Rodriguez was not an LBUSD student at the time of the incident, but she had been previously.

The Long Beach Police Department has also opened a homicide investigation, as Gonzalez was an employee of the school district instead of the city. Police will send the results of their investigation to the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s office, which will decide what charges (if any) to bring against Gonzalez.

A crowd of dozens gathered outside the school board meeting on Wednesday evening, many attendees supporting removing officers from schools and calling for more training in de-escalating situations. “I hope my sister gets the justice that she deserves,” said Oscar Rodriguez, 23, the victim’s older brother. “This can happen to any other family next.”

According to The Washington Post, the district’s use of force policy permits officers to fire their weapons only in self-defense or to prevent death or “great bodily injury” of another. It also explicitly forbids officers to fire at someone who is feeling, toward a moving vehicle or through a vehicle window, unless the circumstances “clearly warrant the use of a firearm as a final means of defense.”

“We clearly saw areas where this employee violated District policy and did not meet our expectations,” said Jill Baker, Long Beach Unified School District Superintendent. “We believe the decision to terminate this officer’s employment is warranted, justified and—quite frankly—the right thing to do.”

About the Author

Matt Jones is senior editor of Spaces4Learning and Campus Security and Life Safety. He can be reached at [email protected]

Featured

  • sapling sprouting from a cracked stone

    Lessons in Resilience: Disaster Recovery in Our Schools

    Facility managers play a pivotal role in how well a school weathers and recovers from a crisis. Whether it's a hurricane, a flood, a tornado, or a man-made event, preparation determines resilience.

  • Preparing for the Next Era of Healthcare Education, Innovation

    Across the country, public universities and community colleges are accelerating investments in healthcare education facilities as part of a broader strategy to address workforce shortages, modernize outdated infrastructure, and expand clinical training capacity. These projects, which are often located at the center of campus health and science districts, are no longer limited to traditional classrooms.

  • Different Starting Points, Same End Goal

    Higher education campuses can enhance student experience by implementing mobile credentials to streamline building access, on-campus payments, and access to other amenities. This enables students to connect to their campuses through the technology they use most: their mobile devices.

  • El Paso District Breaks Ground on New Elementary School

    The Canutillo Independent School District in El Paso, Texas, recently announced that construction has begun on a 119,000-square-foot elementary school, according to a news release. The district partnered with Pfluger Architects, Carl Daniel Architects, and LDCM Solutions on the new Davenport Elementary School, which has an expected completion date of 2027.

Digital Edition