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ce the 1999 Columbine school 
massacre, when officials huddled outside to formulate a plan while shooters 
continued firing inside and a teacher bled to death without timely treatment. 
Now police immediately charge in to stop the shooting as quickly as 
possible; officers are trained to step over the wounded and stop the 
gunman first, then tend to victims.During active shooter training last month 
with the LAX police and LAPD, Los Angeles city firefighters wearing ballistic 
vests and helmets dragged survivors to areas where they could provide treatment.Because 
police are often the first at the scene where there are injuries, 
California law requires officers receive first aid and CPR training in the 
academy and regular refreshers afterward.A recent audit by Los Angeles Police 
Commission Inspector General Alex Bustamante found that the LAPD had a zero 
percent compliance rate. Only 250-sworn officers in the Metropolitan Division 
out of the department's more than 9,900 sworn officers received the refresher 
training, it states. Airport police have the training.On day-to-day crime 
scenes, firefighters wait down the street until police clear the scene, 
usually in minutes, and allow them in, Los Angeles County Fire Battalion 
Chief Larry Collins, who's a member of a Los Angeles interagency working 
group creating best practices for mass casualty incidents."When we have 
an active shooter, we can't hold back a block away, we've got 
to go in" because cl
MOSCOW  Russia's media oversight agency aims to take a newspaper to 
court over an article about a homosexual teacher in what appears to 
be the first case prepared against a publication under the country's law 
on gay propaganda.In September, a youth-oriented newspaper in Khabarovsk 
interviewed a teacher who had been fired over his sexual orientation. Quotes 
in the article prompted complaints to Roskomnadzor, the agency that supervises 
media conformance with law.A regional spokeswoman for the agency, Olga Shakhmatova, 
was quoted by the Interfax news agency on Wednesday as saying the 
article violated a law forbidding distribution to minors of material supporting 
non-traditional sexual relationships.She said documents would be sent to 
court soon, but Roskomnadzor officials said Friday they did not know if 
the case had been filed. The law calls for fines of up 
to 100,000 rubles ($3,300) for individuals and 1 million rubles ($33,000) 
for organizations along with a possible 90-day suspension.The law, passed 
this summer, has raised criticism abroad and caused concern about whether 
it would be applied to athletes and spectators at the Winter Olympics 
in the Russian city of Sochi in February.Homosexuality is not illegal in 
Russia, but animosity toward gays is high. The new law does not 
define either the criteria for considering an action or statement to be 
propaganda or what sort of distribution to minors is prohibited. Critics 
say the lack of cl


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