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.
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.
More Patrol

5 Things to Know When Buying Patrol Lights
Whether it’s time to buy a personal patrol light or make the decision for the next department-issued patrol light, what do you need to know? How do you weigh the different variables and make the best choice?
Read More →
Warriors Heart’s Mission to Serve America’s Veterans and First Responders
Warriors Heart works closely with federal and community partners to expand treatment options for veterans and first responders. By combining specialized clinical care with a peer-driven recovery environment, the program helps warriors rebuild strength, restore relationships, and rediscover purpose.
Read More →
How are LE Boots Different for Women?
Boots fit differently for men and women, so how are law enforcement boots for women designed differently from those worn by men? In this video, Kyle Ferdyn, of Garmont Tactical, shares all the details.
Read More →
Motorola Solutions Extends Resilient, Mission-Critical Communications and AI with T-Satellite from T-Mobile
A collaboration between Motorola Solutions and T-Mobile helps deliver uninterrupted situational awareness and access to AI wherever the mission leads, enabled by satellite connectivity for Motorola Solutions' APX NEXT smart radios.
Read More →
Registration Now Open for 2026 Vision FirstNet Users Summit
Registration is now open for the 2026 Vision FirstNet Users Summit. The Summit is an opportunity to connect with local and federal leaders, specifically the FirstNet Authority, which is hosting a track at the event this year.
Read More →
Tasmanian Tiger Launches Modular Chest Rig 4xM4 & Modular Chest Rig Pack for LE
Tasmanian Tiger has expanded its Modular Load-Carrying System with the new Modular Chest Rig 4xM4 and Modular Chest Rig Pack. Both provide adaptable, low-profile load options for military, law enforcement, and SWAT missions.
Read More →
ZeroEyes Expands from AI Gun Detection to Knife Detection & Suspect Tracking
ZeroEyes has launched three new product categories to extend beyond firearms to address additional acute safety threats and basic security needs. Knife detection and suspect tracking are now also available.
Read More →
GALLS Acquires CMS Uniforms
GALLS has acquired CMS Uniforms and Equipment, Inc., a prominent regional provider based in Nashville, Tennessee. CMS Uniforms, founded in 2000, has built a reputation for delivering stellar customer service and managing complex uniform programs for more than 670 accounts.
Read More →
Brinc Unveils Guardian, Launching the Next Era of Drone as First Responder
Brinc’s new Guardian delivers 24/7 operations, Starlink connectivity, and a robotic charging nest that can swap batteries and change payload configurations without human intervention.
Read More →
Colorado State Patrol Releases 2025 Struck-By Analysis
The Colorado State Patrol, after analyzing its 2025 struck-by incidents, identified one area for improvement: using traffic cones to provide advanced warning before the cruiser's location. Here is the agency’s final data.
Read More →