Culver City School Calm in Wake of Shootings
Violence: 'We still feel that we have a safe campus,' principal says. No arrests have been made.
By BIGAIL GOLDMAN, Times Staff Writer
The scene one day after a high school shooting is depressingly
familiar to anyone who watches the evening news: frightened-looking
students huddled in groups, angry parents descending on the campus
demanding tightened security, and administrators pleading for calm.
But the day after two teenagers were wounded in a drive-by shooting on
the periphery of Culver City High School, the scene was extraordinary
because, on the surface, everything was so ordinary.
Parents dropped off children at the curb Thursday. Lone students
walked to school as usual. Teachers marched inside to begin their
lessons.
"It's pretty normal," said Rosalind LaBriola, the assistant principal
of Culver City Middle School, which is next door to the high school. "It
was pretty normal [Wednesday] after what happened."
Two boys--one of whom had been expelled from school, the other a
student at a nearby continuation school--were waiting for friends in
front of the school's auditorium Wednesday when a group of young men
drove up and opened fire, police said. One boy, age 16, was hit in the
shoulder; the other, a 15-year-old, was shot in the leg, police said.
Neither has been identified.
No arrests had been made Thursday, and detectives were investigating
the possibility that the incident was gang-related.
Whether it was a testament to their faith in a relatively safe
community and school or a statement about society's acceptance of
pervasive violence, parents and students in Culver City went about
business as usual.
"What else can you do?" asked Linda Finley, 46, as she accompanied her
15-year-old son, Stephen, into school for a prearranged conference. "This
is something you can't really control--who ever would expect something
like this?"
Had it not been for her meeting, Finley added, she would have dropped
Stephen off as usual--perhaps adding a few words about being safe to her
regular goodbye.
The Culver City Unified School District is providing optional
counseling and sending home a letter from the school superintendent
describing the incident and attempting to reassure parents.
It was the first campus shooting in the district's 49-year history,
the letter says.
"We still feel that we have a safe campus," said Culver City High
Principal Marvin Brown. "This could have happened down the street just as
easily. I can't safeguard the streets. I can only limit who comes in and
out of the school."
The ethnically and socioeconomically diverse city of 40,000, whose
borders stretch from Marina del Rey to Southwest Los Angeles, reported
only four homicides in 1996, the latest year for which complete crime
figures are available.
Just before the 7:50 a.m. first bell, Alexandra Torres and Amber Lane,
both 15, leaned against the metal fence around a grassy area in front of
the school, nonchalantly watching as the steady parade of students made
their way inside.
They were not afraid, they said, even if their mothers were a bit more
circumspect.
Amber's mother was driving by the school Wednesday when she saw the
ambulances. She ran to the school to find out what had happened, Amber
said, and was held inside along with the students, waiting for police to
give the official word that it was safe to leave.
Alexandra said her mother offered to let her stay home Thursday, but
the first-year high schooler declined. "She said in case it happens
again, but I said it could happen any time," Alexandra said. "I'd have to
come back sooner or later."
So wary or not, both mothers sent their daughters to school as usual;
both daughters, as usual, stood right outside in the open until the last
possible minute and then dashed inside to begin their day.
Pat Rosby jumped out of her car to kiss and hug her 17-year-old son,
Jonathan, goodbye--only a slight deviation from their usual routine.
The only other change was an extra plea to God for Jonathan's safety
and the safety of all the students who would pass through the front gates
Thursday morning.
"You can just pray," Rosby said. "That's the only thing you can do."