Training In Jefferson County Aimed At Preventing Church Shootings

GOLDEN, Colo. (CBS4) - Dozens of people from different faith-based organizations packed into a Jefferson County hearing room on Tuesday for a "safety in faith" workshop. James Allbee is a member of the security team for Red Rocks Church.

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"Everybody is much more aware as these (situations) continue to happen at public places where it should be a safe place to worship, to go to work, to go to school whatever it may be, it has left us all a little more vulnerable," he said.

FBI agents search for clues at the entrance to the First Baptist Church, after a mass shooting that killed 26 people in Sutherland Springs, Texas on November 6, 2017. (credit: MARK RALSTON/AFP/Getty Images)

The workshop held multiple times a year is organized by Jefferson County Sheriff Jeff Shrader.

"This is not faith specific. This is about keeping Jefferson County safe," he said.

CHARLESTON, SC - JUNE 19: Charleston Mayor Joseph Riley (2nd R) arrives for a news conference outside the historic Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church, June 19, 2015 in Charleston, South Carolina. Authorities arrested Dylann Storm Roof, 21, of Lexington, South Carolina, after he allegedly attended a prayer meeting at the church for an hour before opening fire and killing three men and six women. Among the dead is the Rev. Clementa Pinckney, a state senator and a pastor at the church, the oldest black congregation in America south of Baltimore, according to the National Park Service. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

Shrader organized the training after a gunman opened fire in 2015 at a Charleston, South Carolina, church. He was attending a law enforcement conference with his counterpart from that county the night of the shooting.

"It caused me to ask some questions to myself and also of my staff when I to got back in my office of how well connected are we to our faith community in Jefferson County," Shrader said.

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The answer, he says, was they could do better.

Now, the county offers faith-based leaders and their security teams a chance to train in recognizing suspicious behavior and de-escalating a variety of situations.

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"Its an opportunity to come in here and learn something and hopefully make all of our campuses safer," Allbee said

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