Fake Drill Rifles freak out High School-Student faces explusion

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DENVER -- For Marie Morrow, the equipment left in the back seat of her car was for an upcoming competition. She said she never expected it would lead to her being suspended from school -- or possibly expelled.

"I take responsibility, it was my mistake," Morrow told 7NEWS. She left three drill team "practice" rifles in plain view of passing students last week.

Morrow, who says she has a 3.5 grade point average, is a member of the Douglas County Young Marines. She said she spins the practice rifles for the organization’s drill team.

Staff members at Cherokee Trail High School were alerted by concerned students who thought they might be real, said a Cherry Creek Schools spokeswoman.

"They went inside. They were anxious. They were frightened," school district spokeswoman Tustin Amole said.

The mock rifles are made of wood, with duct tape, to resemble a real rifle.

Amole explained the school district’s policy mirrors state and federal laws about weapons in schools, and calls for "mandatory expulsion" when possessing a dangerous weapon in any school building.

A student conduct handbook states a dangerous weapon includes "a firearm, whether loaded or unloaded, or a firearm facsimile that could reasonably be mistaken for an actual firearm."

"You have to remember these laws were implemented in the years after Columbine," Amole said, and added the school was left with no choice.

"We follow the state law," Amole said.

"I understand exactly why the policy is there," Morrow said on the east steps of the state capitol Monday.

Chris Proctor, commanding officer of the Douglas County Young Marines, praised Morrow's commitment to the program and school.

"For her to have to go through this is completely insane," Proctor said.

The Young Marine Organization is the official youth program of the U.S. Marine Corps and focused on drug reduction and leadership, Proctor explained.

Morrow, dressed in her drill team uniform, visited the capitol to visit with lawmakers about the possibility of changing the state statute relating to weapons in schools.

"It should be up to the discretion of the school board to say, 'OK, there's no intent, it was just a mistake,'" Morrow said with her mom, brother, and friends looking on.

Morrow, who plans to attend the United States Merchant Marine Academy, met briefly with and gained support from several legislators on the hill.

Sen. Scott Renfroe, (R-Weld County,) said the 17-year-old was the topic of discussion among fellow senators.

"We need to look at this and add some common sense to our statute," Renfroe said.

Reps. Cindy Acree, (R-Aurora,) and Frank McNulty, (R-Highlands Ranch,) held an impromptu meeting with Morrow and her family inside the capitol.

Acree told 7NEWS she doesn't fault the school district for enforcing state laws.

"We just have to make sure it's not overbearing for our administrators and students, so they can still be kids," Acree said.

She explained she may seek to amend the state statute with a late bill during the current legislative session.

Acree added she is also writing a letter to colleagues "so we can support (Marie) before she goes to her hearing."

Amole said an expulsion hearing will be held within 10 days of a student suspension. An expulsion officer will make a recommendation to the superintendent, who will rule on the length of expulsion.

Morrow said she her expulsion hearing is Feb. 20.

"I'm just hoping I can go back to school and graduate with my class and take my AP tests and all that," she said.
 
Well, this could actually turn out to be a story with a happy ending. She's got some folks on her side and they're talking about introducing a bill that would ammend current law to prevent this sort of nonsense. We'll see how that goes. But it could certainly turn out well and set the ball rolling in the right direction for these cases.
 
Sad, You just can't make shit like this up. Wonder what would have happened if she had a picture of a real rifle?
 
hmm trying to expell a 3.5 GPA student for doing nothing wrong??

I do hope she actually puts together a case and fight it instead of saying "I understand the rules" ...
 
"Our Country won't go on forever, if we stay soft as we are now. There won't be any AMERICA because some foreign soldier will invade us and take our women and breed a hardier race!"
~LT. GEN. LEWIS "CHESTY" PULLER, USMC

It's okay, Chesty. Don't worry. America is hard and strong [rolleyes].
 
Sad, You just can't make shit like this up. Wonder what would have happened if she had a picture of a real rifle?

Remember the case of the second or third grader who put little army men with guns on his Halloween costume and got suspended? Zero tolerance, hmph

Looking for the link...
 
Remember the case of the second or third grader who put little army men with guns on his Halloween costume and got suspended? Zero tolerance, hmph

Looking for the link...

I remember there was a young kid suspended for drawing a gun on paper.
That's all I used to doddle in school. I remember a teacher coming over, looking at my drawing of a P-51 and showing me how to angle it so the wings showed.
 
I am convinced she'd probably get in trouble if she had a broom stick with a "BANG!" flag hanging from it (a la bugs bunny).

There seems to be absolutely no thinking involved here. How long until the school PC thought police start censoring out all words that "MIGHT BE related to firearms"?
 
In middle school we had an entire four foot section on the military and firearms. Most of the firearms books were always checked out. The one time that the best one was there, I went to get it and all of the kids who usually had it started telling me I was crazy and asked me why I would want a gun book. Made no sense to me. I guess it's because I wasn't taking it to draw the guns that were in it; but instead to read it.
 
You just need two: Zero Tolerance.
Yeah, that sort of sums up fascism... [sad2]

I love how they keep talking about "making a mistake"...

When I was in school, the drill teams had such things around all the time...

Where was the mistake? Other than the idiots who mistook them for a gun?

Oh well - preaching to the converted around here.
 
Maybe the answer isn't to hide the drill rifles - maybe if the other kids were actually around real guns once in a while, they wouldn't freak out so easily.
 
When I was on the drill team we used m-14's that were rendered inoperable. And after practice in the morning we used to march right down the hallways as school was starting, no one freaked out. This was right after 9-11 too, then again this is in lynn and half the kids were probably packin anyway[laugh]
 
you know, not allll that long ago, it was common sense that the world was flat, everyone that believed otherwise were crazy or stupid...
Funny how history has shown common sense to be wrong quite often.
 
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