I personally would not have blamed this officer... which is being used as a scapegoat ... for not having a better security system in place for him and the children ... in that school ...
I would just want more factual information.
I have no idea what the school layout is or where he was in relation to the shooter or what policies are in place regarding what he's supposed to do.
The satellite image on Google maps shows kind of a convoluted school campus. In my high school there was one building, with three floors. I'm reading this happened in "building 12" among 3 floors.
For all I know the shots were echoing and he thought there were multiple shooters and just couldn't decide which one to go after first or which building one or more shooters were in.
For all I know he thought the shots were coming closer to him so was waiting.
For all I know kids kept running by his position and he stayed there to see if anyone was chasing them.
For all I know he froze up. It happens.
I don't blame him for doing or not doing anything.
What could just as easily happened is he runs in there, shoots at the shooter but ends up hitting bystanders, killing more kids. Or going to the wrong room, getting shot in the back, and now the killer has another gun.
There's a reason why there is a police "force" rather than one police man, they have a SWAT "team" rather than sending in lone gunslingers, why cops generally have partners and "backup," and they work to control the "scene."
From where I sit now trying to judge that guy based on the information I've seen is like trying to armchair quarterback a football game a friend saw in ESPN highlights.
There's just not enough relevant information.
And we'll never know what was really going on in his head, or the actual situation from his perspective.
If he ever comes forward with "his side" there is no way to determine if it's not just BS scripted by his lawyer.