‘That building is still a time capsule’: Slow-moving Parkland school shooting reenactment wraps up hours after congressional visit

PARKLAND, Fla. — Gunshots cracked across the campus of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School at noon Friday, in a reenactment of the 2018 shooting by a former student who killed 17 students and staff members.

Firearms experts fired 49 rounds and four test shots, as a crowd of journalists and neighborhood residents watched from off campus. Just four of the shots could be heard from where they stood.

The gunshots are being used as part of a lawsuit by victims’ families against the Broward Sheriff’s Office and on-campus Deputy Scot Peterson, who has been vilified for failing to confront the killer. Peterson claimed he didn’t know where the gunshots were coming from.

“The reenactment proves with absolute certainty that Peterson is a liar,” said attorney David Brill, who represents the victims’ families and who took turns with his law partner standing on Friday where the deputy had stood as the shots were fired. “The key here is knowing without a doubt that the gunfire was coming from inside the building.”

Peterson’s lawyer, Mark Eiglarsh, criticized Friday’s gunfire test as “traumatic,” “prejudicial” and offering “little to no evidentiary value.”

He said testimony in Peterson’s criminal trial made clear that many people were mistaken about the source of the gunfire, which he said was understandable “due to the massive, multi-leveled concrete buildings. For example, the 1200 building and the neighboring 1300 building are multi-leveled and both 73 yards long.”

“All the witnesses that we called testified that they believed, with certainty, that the shots were not coming from the 1200 building,” he wrote. “They all thought the shots were coming from somewhere ‘outside.’ Many thought the shots were coming from the football field, which was literally hundreds of yards away from where the shooter actually was.”

Despite the dread and anticipation surrounding the reenactment of one of the worst days in Florida history, the procedure itself appeared plodding and methodical, as workers moved from place to place and measured distances. Only four shots had been heard by the crowd across the street as of 2 p.m.

By mid-afternoon, the media audience had thinned, neighbors were back behind closed doors, and there was only an occasional hint of activity outside the 1200 building: Two men carting equipment, a man with a camera capturing images outside the structure, men darting around in a golf cart. TV news crews sweated under umbrellas.

The first event of the day was a visit to the school by nine members of Congress, who toured the halls and classrooms that were the scenes of the shooting. A second tour is being planned at a later date.

“I felt it was important for them to walk through the 1200 building today so they could see the horror, the glass on the floor, the bullet holes in the walls and the blood that still is on the floor there,” said Lori Alhadeff, chairwoman of the Broward County School Board, whose 14-year-old daughter Alyssa was killed in the attack. “And to know that this tragedy —- they need to now take action, they need now to make sure that we have every school security measure possible to be put in place, and they have that ability as a congressperson to be able to make that change for school safety at the federal level.”

Peterson, the only armed law enforcement officer on campus when the shooting began, took cover at a nearby building for more than 40 minutes and failed to confront the killer. Peterson, 60, was acquitted in June of felony child neglect and other criminal charges for failing to act, the first U.S. trial in history of a law enforcement officer for conduct during an on-campus shooting.

Victims’ families called him a coward and a liar, and their lawsuit against him led to Friday’s live-fire test, which was intended to establish whether or not he could have known the source of the gunfire.

“We were all in support of the reenactment,” Max Schachter, whose 14-year-old son Alex was killed in the shooting, said at a news conference Friday afternoon. “The jury that had watched the video during the criminal trials, there was no audio in that video. And so that’s why we’re doing the reenactment, and we believe that it will show that there’s no possible way that Scot Peterson didn’t hear the 70 rounds from an AR-15 when he was just feet away from that building.”

The destruction of the 1200 building had been postponed for its value as evidence in the criminal case against the shooter and in the lawsuits. But the school district plans to demolish it this year, removing an eerie and disturbing presence from the Stoneman Douglas campus.

“It’s just always there no matter what,” said Alex Gott, a Stoneman Douglas senior covering the reenactment for the school’s production team, who had attended the adjacent middle school at the time of the shooting. “So as much as I try to enjoy the high school experience, you can’t really forget about that.”

At mid-morning, families and members of the congressional delegation began arriving for a roundtable discussion at the Fort Lauderdale Marriott Coral Springs, the hotel where many families learned that loved ones had been killed on the day of the shooting.

“I hate it here,” said Debbi Hixon, a school board member whose husband, athletic director Chris Hixon, was murdered in the attack. “But things keep happening here, so you figure it out. This is my least favorite place ever.”

After brief introductory remarks, the congressional delegation and family members held a roundtable discussion that was closed to the media.

“I want to thank the families for walking us through the building today, allowing us the opportunity to get a slight glimpse into what they deal with every single solitary day,” said U.S. Rep. Jared Moskowitz, a 1999 Stoneman Douglas graduate.

He noted they were able to pass the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School Public Safety Act, which included money for school hardening, requirements for armed officers in schools and some gun restrictions.

“Parkland was the safest city in the entire state of Florida based on crime statistics when this event happened,” Moskowitz said. “And now it’s home to the largest school shooting in American history.”

At a news conference after the roundtable, Moskowitz described the tour of the building, saying law enforcement officials “helped walk us through and showed us step-by-step the carnage that the shooter did.”

“That building is still a time capsule,” he said. “It’s exactly as it was the day after the shooting.”

Tony Montalto, whose 14-year-old daughter Gina was killed in the massacre, said he was grateful the tour included members of Congress from both parties.

“That is the only way we are going to pass lasting and meaningful legislation in Congress that will make our students and our teachers safer,” Montalto said. “Both Republicans and Democrats want safe schools for their children.”

He said participants in the roundtable “had fulsome discussions in there.They realize that they could come together and make some of that change. We’re hopeful to see more of their colleagues join them.”

Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart, a Florida Republican, said the federal government “has done some things, but it goes without saying you can never do enough. I think most folks would agree on 60, 70 or 80% of what those additional steps should be.”

Gun control, which had been a major cause of Stoneman Douglas survivors and family members, was discussed at the roundtable, Moskowitz said.

“We talked all issues. Nothing was off the table,” he said.

“There’s agreement in some places, disagreement in some places,” he said. “This was a full conversation.”

But Diaz-Balart, who voted against gun legislation passed last year, wouldn’t say whether he would be willing to bend on his opposition to gun control.

Asked whether he might support future gun control legislation, he said, “We need to put aside those issues which might be the ones to get all the headlines, but we know are very difficult to get bipartisan support.”

At the high school, the gunshot tests were expected to last all day. Todd Foot, who lives across from the school and whose son attended school there, came out of his house to film on his phone as the delegation entered the building early Friday. He said his son went to the school when the shooting happened.

“If it’s going to help the case of holding Scot Peterson accountable and parents are OK with it, then I’m OK with it,” he said. “But it’s traumatic for the whole community again.”

He’s looking forward to the demolition of the building.

“We’ve been waiting for it to be knocked down for 5 and a half years,” he said. “Justice hasn’t been done so far with the shooter getting a non-death sentence … Hopefully (Peterson) gets sued into oblivion.”

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