Fighting Fire with Fire
It was March 21, 2:55 p.m., spring was in the air in the remote north woods of Minnesota, and the students of Red Lake High School were anxiously awaiting the sound of the bell. What they heard instead was explosions out in the hallway.
It was March 21, 2:55 p.m., spring was in the air in the remote north woods of Minnesota, and the students of Red Lake High School were anxiously awaiting the sound of the bell. What they heard instead was explosions out in the hallway.
The explosions were the booming reports of a 12-gauge shotgun being used to murder school security guard Derrick Brun, 28. Brun was unarmed, yet he tried to stop the shooter.
The gunman was Jeff Weise, a 17-year-old Red Lake High student who was out to “Columbine” his school. Earlier that afternoon Weise had killed his grandfather—a 58-year-old Tribal Police officer—and his grandfather’s girlfriend, stolen his grandfather’s guns and ballistic police vest, and driven to his school.
By the time Weise’s rampage ended at approximately 3:05 p.m., he had killed nine people, including himself, and wounded as many as 14, seven seriously.
As terrible as the “Red Lake Massacre” was, it could have been much worse. Weise was heavily armed with weapons and ammunition, he wanted a high body count, and he offered his fellow students no more compassion than most people would give the mechanical ducks at a shooting gallery. He would have kept shooting, as long as he had ammo. And no one inside the school was equipped to stop him.
Fortunately, the one thing the students and teachers in the school were able to do was call the Tribal Police.
The Red Lake Tribal Police Department is a small agency of 22 sworn officers. It doesn’t have a lot of tactical resources. However, it does have dedicated officers who were willing to put themselves in harm’s way to stop Weise.
Red Lake Director of Public Safety Pat Mills says he takes great pride in the fact that his officers reacted quickly and decisively to the active-shooter incident. “I can’t praise these officers enough,” he says. “They realized that they couldn’t wait for a tactical team, and they did exactly what they were trained to do.”
Police training is exactly why Weise did not inflict a higher toll of blood and pain on his classmates. When they learned of the massacre in progress, the Tribal Police knew what to do because, in a way, they had done it before.
Two years ago Red Lake Tribal Police officers participated in an active-shooter drill at Red Lake High. It was force-on-force training with an actor playing the bad guy, actual students playing victims, and even a little stress inoculation provided by exploding firecrackers that were used to simulate gunfire. In that training exercise, the cops rushed into the school with unloaded weapons, covered each other, moved to the sound of the shooting, and ended the incident.
On March 21, they rushed into the school just as they had in training. But this time with loaded weapons, M4 carbines to be exact. They located the shooter quickly, exchanged fire with him (teaching him a lesson about .223 rounds vs. Kevlar), and forced him to retreat into a classroom where he took his own life.
One moral of this story is that good, realistic police training can save lives. The other is that patrol rifles are a must in an active-shooter situation. No one knows what would have happened at Red Lake High School if the local police had only been armed with handguns and shotguns. But odds are, the responding officers and possibly more civilians would have been wounded or killed.
Tell your administrators about Red Lake when they want to slash your training budget or limit your armed response to just duty pistols.
More Patrol

Why Tennessee’s New Deadly Force Law Matters Beyond Tennessee
Tennessee’s new deadly force law is more limited than many may realize. Effective July 1, 2026, the law applies to a person who is not engaged in conduct that would constitute a felony or a Class A misdemeanor and who is in a place where the person lawfully resides. But it could have far-reaching influence.
Read More →
When Do You Transport a Wounded Officer by Police Vehicle?
Time-sensitive injuries like penetrating trauma mean a wounded officer needs to reach a trauma center as soon as possible, and in some cases, that means transporting by police vehicle rather than waiting for EMS. What are the factors to consider in making that transport decision?
Read More →
Safariland Solis Rethinks Concealable Duty
What if Level I retention didn’t require a full duty rig? Safariland’s Solis delivers trusted ALS security in a streamlined OWB platform built for administrative and plainclothes professionals who need protection without the bulk.
Read More →
5 Things to Know When Buying Backup Lights for Patrol Use
What is the value of a backup light, and what do you need to consider when selecting one? These smaller lights are invaluable as a secondary or special-purpose light and can be easily carried in a pocket or clipped to MOLLE gear, a key chain, shirt, or a vest.
Read More →
363 Fallen Officers Honored During National Police Week
In case you missed NELOMF’s annual Candlelight Vigil, here are all 363 names of the fallen officers whose names were added to the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial this year.
Read More →
NYPD Officers Who Responded Quickly During IED Incident Recognized as NLEOMF Officers of the Month
Chief Aaron Edwards and Sgt. Luis Navarro were recognized by NLEOMF as Officers of the Month for their response during an IED incident and their actions that helped prevent harm to the public.
Read More →
National Police Survey Reveals How Americans View Policing Today
A new national survey offers a comprehensive look at how Americans view policing. The study uncovers public sentiment toward local vs. federal police, communications, crisis response, the use of AI in policing, and more.
Read More →
Streamlight TLR-7 X Selected as Standard Issue Pistol Light by Canadian Federal Police
The Canadian Federal Police will be adding a new duty pistol system, which will include Streamlight’s TLR-7 X and a Glock 45 MOS 7 pistol with a red dot sight.
Read More →
Fallen Law Enforcement Officers from Across the Country to be Honored During 38th Annual Candlelight Vigil on May 13th in Washington, D.C.
The National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund (NLEOMF) will honor 363 fallen officers who have died in the line of duty as their names are added to the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial during the annual Candlelight Vigil on May 13.
Read More →
What Should Be in Your IFAK?
What should every officer include in an IFAK? Sydney Vail, M.D., a veteran trauma surgeon and former SWAT surgeon, explains which components are needed and which are not, and stresses training.
Read More →
