"Based on the location of the shooter and the position of the weapon, it did not activate the system," a district official told the USA TODAY Network.
The position of the camera and the shooter led to an AI-powered weapon detection system failing to pick up on a student's gun.
Following Wednesday's deadly shooting inside Antioch High School, questions have been raised over security measures taken inside Metro Nashville Public Schools.
Following a deadly shooting at Antioch High School, the big questions on everyone’s mind is how this could have happened and what security measures were put in place that could have prevented the student from getting a gun into the building.
The technology system meant to prevent school shootings failed to detect the Antioch High School shooter's gun, an official confirms.
Police were called to the school at 11 a.m. ET, according to the Metropolitan Nashville Police Department. The suspected shooter is “no longer a threat,” police said. “Antioch High School is ...
The suspected shooter who killed one student at a high school in Nashville on Tuesday has been identified as Solomon Henderson, 17.
Metropolitan Nashville Police Department Wearing a fake beard and unnatural lock curls, a Tennessee man entered a Jewish community center as part of an “internet prank” that ultimately landed ...
The Metropolitan Nashville Police Department told CBS News that the shooting happened in the school cafeteria. Police were called to the school at 11:11 a.m. local time, police said. The police ...
Police are still investigating the shooting. Metro Nashville Police Department John Drake said the shooter was a student at Antioch High and that he rode the bus to school Wednesday morning before ...
The technology, Omnialert, is an Artificial Intelligence (AI) gun detection used in ... authorities confirmed Metro Nashville Police Department'sDon Aaron says the shooter is identified as Solomon ...
Analysts with the ADL Center on Extremism "have located a manifesto and social media accounts believed to belong to the shooter, where he shared a range of incel, accelerationist, white supremacist, antisemitic & anti-Black content," the organization wrote in a Wednesday post on X (formerly Twitter ).