Masked and hooded boys shot up the entrance of Coronado Hills Elementary in north metro Denver one night last month, leaving holes in the bulletproof glass and school officials waiting for costly repairs.
And after this vandalism on March 26, the students — pre-kindergarten through fifth grade — have been curious upon arrival for class. They want to touch the bullet holes, office manager Rosa Becerra said. “We let them touch the holes, but we don’t want them to push in the glass,” Becerra said. Boards have been installed as makeshift buttressing.The shooting happened during spring break at night and nobody was in the building, Adams 12 Five Star School District officials said. Extra security staffers were added at Coronado Hills, located between Denver and Thornton in unincorporated Adams County, on the first day back from break.
“The school is now leaving its outside lights on overnight,” school district spokeswoman Alicia Stice said. “Our facilities team has measured the windows and ordered replacement glass. Depending on supply chain issues, we anticipate completing repairs within the month.” Security surveillance camera imagery showed boys who couldn’t easily be identified because they wore ski masks and hoodies. A school security officer concluded they fired a heavy-duty pellet gun, powerful enough to penetrate bullet-proof glass.
Outrageous
Trans shooter in Colorado Springs stopped
Apparently Colorado Springs police just stopped a Trans intended mass shooter with a manifesto.
They were just taking Covid precautions
Hoodies should be outlawed
the hell is wrong with kids these days⁉️