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FBI Opposes the Profiling of Students 

By David A. Vise and Kenneth J. Cooper
Washington Post Staff Writers
Thursday , September 7, 2000 ; A03 

The FBI said yesterday it strongly opposes developing
student profiles to predict future violence, favoring
instead a series of steps to assess the seriousness of
individual threats and determine how to address them.

In a 45-page study released as students across the
country returned to the classroom, the FBI rejected the
controversial practice of profiling, saying it is
virtually impossible to predict who will commit the next
violent act.

Profiling has been criticized because of its use by
police departments to target some minority groups and
its potential to stigmatize students who do not pose a
threat.

"One response to the pressure for action may be an
effort to identify the next shooter by developing a
'profile' of the typical school shooter. This may
sound like a reasonable preventive measure, but in
practice, trying to draw up a catalogue or checklist
of warning signs to detect a potential school shooter
can be shortsighted, even dangerous," the FBI said.

"Such lists, publicized by the media, can end up
unfairly labeling many nonviolent students as
potentially dangerous or even lethal. . . . Seeking to 
predict acts that occur as rarely as school shootings
is almost impossible."

Instead, the FBI unveiled a multi-pronged plan to
assess violent threats, suggesting that a student's
personality, as well as family, school and social 
dynamics, must be analyzed by school administrators,
teachers and counselors to determine how to respond.

"It does look helpful," said Judy Seltz, spokeswoman
for the American Association of School Administrators.
"It helps administrators differentiate different kinds
of threats." For the FBI threat assessment to succeed,
Seltz said, it is important for administrators to
undergo "some very thorough staff training before
there's a crisis."

But Vincent Schiraldi, president of the Center on
Juvenile and Criminal Justice, a Washington think
tank, said the potential for misuse of the FBI 
report through harmful profiling of students outweighs
any benefits it might produce at a time of declining
school and juvenile violence.

"I don't think this is going to help," Schiraldi said.

Gavin de Becker, whose California company has marketed
computer software for assessing student threats,
concurred with the FBI's rejection of profiling 
and embrace of threat assessment.

"A threat is to a school shooting what a cough is to
tuberculosis. In other words, it's one symptom. . . .
You have to look at all the symptoms before 
you can come up with a diagnosis," he said.

De Becker said "many refinements" were made in his
Mosaic for Assessment of Student Threats after a trial
in 25 schools across the country. This year, every
police department in California will have access to
the software, which also will be available for use by
many more schools across the country, he said.

The FBI provided a list of clues to look for after a
student has made a violent threat. Under student
personality, the FBI listed 28 characteristics, ranging
from fascination with violence-filled entertainment to
inappropriate role models. Under family dynamics, it
listed access to weapons, lack of supervision of
television and Internet use and evidence of violence
at home.

Under school and social dynamics, the FBI said clues
include the use of drugs and alcohol, involvement with
peers who share extremist beliefs and feelings of
detachment from school.

"All threats are NOT created equal," the FBI report
emphasized, adding that responses must be tailored to
fit the seriousness of the threat.

A panel of experts at an FBI media briefing yesterday
also opposed "zero tolerance" policies, concluding
that automatic expulsions could make students more
violent.

FBI agent Marie Dyson, who worked on the report, said
getting students to inform teachers or administrators
about violence threatened by peers remains a major
challenge. "The biggest problem is students are too
afraid or too much a part of a code of silence," she
said.

The report, called "The School Shooter," includes ideas
generated by an FBI-sponsored symposium on school
violence last year and an in-depth review of 18 suburban
and rural school shooting cases. It does not address
some of the threats faced by urban schools, particularly
ones associated with gang violence.

It said the most serious threats are those that are
direct and specific, such as, "At eight o'clock tomorrow
morning, I intend to shoot the principal. . . . I have
a 9mm. Believe me, I know what I am doing. I am sick
and tired of the way he runs this school."

The FBI's rejection of profiling to predict school
violence should not be confused with the work of the
bureau's behavioral sciences unit in Quantico, Va.,
which develops in-depth profiles of suspects after a
crime has been committed. Those profiles, based on
information gathered at crime scenes and other
relevant data, are used to guide probes, according to
FBI agent Larry G. Ankrom, who heads the unit.

The study also concluded that news coverage magnifies
widespread, incorrect impressions of school violence
by characterizing it as an epidemic and making 
it appear as though all school shooters are generally
alike. It also said the media puts too much emphasis
on easy access to weapons as the most important 
risk factor in school violence.

The report outlines steps for school administrators to
take after determining a threat is serious and credible,
including contacting law enforcement authorities.

Despite the report's conclusions, school officials in
Wallingford, Conn., intend to proceed with a plan to
distribute a behavior profile next month to help
teachers, parents and high school students identify
potentially violent students.

"Nobody can predict 100 percent but . . . there's
enough research and practice, enough experience out
there, for us to be able to identify people who we
should be concerned about," said Joseph Cirasuolo,
superintendent of a 7,000-student district between
Hartford and New Haven. "We expect very, very 
few people to be identified."
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Wonder why the Home Office hasn't thought of this?


Kenneth Pantling
Bad laws are the worst sort of tyranny.
(Edmund Burke�1729-97)


Cybershooters website: http://www.cybershooters.org

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