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PHOENIX -- Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio plans to start putting armed members of his volunteer posse near schools in the wake of the mass shooting in an elementary school in Newtown, Connecticut.

Arpaio doesn't plan to put posse members inside schools but will have them posted around the perimeters.

"Why not utilize the posse into patrolling schools in our areas?" Arpaio asks.

With what he thinks is no reason not to, he'll start this new idea within the next week.

The specific schools are not yet known but volunteers will be spread throughout Arpaio's jurisdiction and he has identified certain areas.

The posse members are qualified for the job, according to Arpaio.

"Our posses are well trained with over 100 hours of how to use weapons [and] they have authority under the elected sheriff," Arpaio said. "I feel they'll be a great asset to schools around our area."

They would be armed with a side-arm and not a semi-automatic weapon.

Arpaio is known as one of the nation's most high-profile supporters of strict U.S.-Mexico border policy.

His plan announced Thursday comes after two other Arizona officials released ideas for boosting school security.

Attorney General Tom Horne proposed firearms training for one person in each school. And Pinal County Sheriff Paul Babeu proposed training multiple educators per school to carry guns.

"It doesn't matter what the reaction is," Arpaio said. "My main objective is to protect the public and do what we can to detour any of the massacres that have been happening around the country."

The sheriff and his posse just finished up patrolling local malls over the holiday season, something they have been doing since 1993.

Information from The Associated Press was used from this report.

KTAR Newsroom,

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  • Abuse
    azgreentea wrote...
    Columbine
    Had an armed off duty officer on campus. It took 3 min to notify them after the shooting started and they engaged the two kids 5 min after the first shots. By then 12 kids had already been killed or wounded. Local Police arrived after 10 min. This is false security, our efforts would be better spent on mental health.
  • Abuse
    The influence Peddler wrote...
    Only
    Until the media coverage slows down on the issue. You guys elected a media hoar. Nice job
  • Abuse
    Michoacan wrote...
    Never fails. Old Joe follows
    the headlines rather than doing proactive law enforcing.
  • Abuse
    kweed wrote...
    Disgusting
    Arpaio uses a terrible tragedy to boost his public image. He makes me sick.
  • Abuse
    UZI wrote...
    @greentea
    you're making the same argument, as others now do, that took place in germany regarding handicaps, mentaly ill and elderly. The issue isn't mental illness. It's a lack of our societies awareness. We're complacent and uninterested in our own proactive safety measures. You make the argument better for teachers and students to be armed and skilled since they are the first to be engaged.
  • Abuse
    greatbison wrote...
    Short term band-aid
    Just like putting soldiers in the airport after 9/11, this will temporarily create a false sense of security. It will work temporarily, but do we want our schools to be prison compounds? In America, is it easier, safer, and more affordable for a mentally ill person to get a gun than it is to get quality mental healthcare services. This isn't a call to get rid of guns, but this is a call for us to do some real soul searching about our priorities as a people, otherwise, the shooters will merely escalate their methods and the rampages will continue.
  • Abuse
    greatbison wrote...
    Short term band-aid
    Just like putting soldiers in the airport after 9/11, this will temporarily create a false sense of security. It will work temporarily, but do we want our schools to be prison compounds? In America, is it easier, safer, and more affordable for a mentally ill person to get a gun than it is to get quality mental healthcare services. This isn't a call to get rid of guns, but this is a call for us to do some real soul searching about our priorities as a people, otherwise, the shooters will merely escalate their methods and the rampages will continue.
  • Abuse
    UZI wrote...
    @micho, Law enforcement IS reactionary
    by nature, has been always will be. That is the purpose of law, to enforce punishment on those who already committed an act. This isn't a law enforcement issue either. This is the result of our complacency and lack of abilities, awarenesses and all out interest in our own well being. We think the job of safety belongs in the hands of others. Our safety is our responsibility. And skilled honorable people, cops, teachers etc, have no reason not to be armed with the resources to protect "tiny tots" as you say.
  • Abuse
    azgreentea wrote...
    @Uzi
    do you think teachers will have a better response time than 5 min? Do you think they will have any more luck than the officer did with his pistol at Columbine? Officer Gardner had to take cover, and was unable to stop the two kids from continuing on and killing 20 more students and detonating two more IED's. The teachers that were present where the shooting started responded about the same time as officer Gardner, and were shot before they could react. You cant arm the teachers enough to prevent a motivated shooter without compromising their role as educators.
  • Abuse
    yrreta wrote...
    This may not be the best solution, but
    it's better than arming teachers and/or school staff.

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