New York City Police Commissioner Ray Kelly told Andrea Mitchell Thursday that putting armed teachers in schools is not the solution to the swell of gun violence across the country.
“I don’t think you’re going to be able to stop someone bent on suicide just by having an armed person there,” Kelly said. ‘These people who have entered the schools and shot the students, they are on a suicide mission. They assume that they’re going to be killed and probably the first person that they would shoot, the first person they would kill–they’d seek out that armed individual. So this is by no means a panacea.”
Arming adults in schools has been at the forefront of the NRA’s reaction to the school shooting in Newtown, Connecticut, that left 20 students and 6 educators dead last month. In the organization’s first comprehensive remarks after the shooting, President Wayne LaPierre called on Congress “to appropriate whatever is necessary to put armed police officers in every school.” The group released an ad on Tuesday pushing the issue and triggering an intense reaction from the public for targeting the president’s school-daughters. In the ad, a voice-over asks, “Are the president’s kids more important than yours? Then why is he skeptical about putting armed security in our schools when his kids are protected by armed guards at their school?”
“It’s questionable as to why the president’s children were mentioned,” Kelly said on Andrea Mitchell Reports Thursday.
Kelly explained that New York City employs 5,500 “school safety agents” in certain schools and said that crime is down in New York City’s school system. “I don’t think it’s a universal need, by any means. Those police officers are addressing, for the most part, maintaining order in schools. We have 1.2 million students in our system. But I don’t believe we need it nationally.”








