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Carvalho faults alleged actions of school safety worker who failed to stop fatal fight

Howard Blume, Los Angeles Times on

Published in News & Features

LOS ANGELES — The Los Angeles school district has removed a campus-safety contractor from Washington Preparatory High School after an adult — who apparently worked for the contractor — refused to intervene before a fight that ended with the death of a student, schools Supt. Alberto Carvalho said Friday.

The fight began after an individual, believed to be a school safety worker, was approached by worried students. In a cellphone video of the April 15 incident, which happened a few blocks from campus, an adult can be heard saying, off camera: "Let them ... fight. If they want to fight, let the ... police [inaudible]. ... I'm not breaking up s—. I don't give a f—."

The allegation — by students and by Nery Paiz, the head of the school administrators union — is that this individual was wearing the yellow vest or jacket that identifies someone as part of "safe passages" — a program to keep students safe on the way to and from school.

Less than 10 seconds after the fight began, three shots rang out and Elijah McGinnis III, 15, collapsed. He was pronounced dead at a hospital.

"If this individual made those comments, that is totally inconsistent with any policy or best practice that we would approve or consent to," Carvalho said in an appearance on the KTLA-TV Channel 5 morning show.

Carvalho then strongly suggested, based on a district probe, that he had reached the same conclusion as others: The person on the video was a safe-passages worker: "I can also say that, on the basis of this investigation, that private sector entity is no longer contracted with the school system."

 

The superintendent's comments were the most significant disclosures to date from the school system in the wake of the shooting.

For 10 days, Los Angeles Unified School District officials referred all questions to the L.A. County Sheriff's Department — which is investigating the shooting. The district continues to refuse to release the name of the company that provided the safe-passages service.

Although Carvalho visited the campus after the fatal shooting, he had not — until Friday — made a public statement.

The incident at Washington Prep raises serious questions about a ramped-up safe-passages effort, including about the level of training and screening for participants and the extent to which they are willing and able to coordinate with police when a situation begins to get out of hand. So far, district officials have provided no specific answers to such questions.

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