TSU keeping secrets from students and parents

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Texas Southern University is intentionally keeping parents and students in the dark. After three school shootings on or near the campus, why doesn’t TSU want parents and students to know if their security cameras even work?

Texas Southern University has had a string of violent events this year. Between August and November, four people were injured by gunfire, and one person was killed. TSU has about 32 police officers. Security cameras are often the front line of protection for the kids, used to identify suspects and ideally someone is watching them to protect the kids.

So Dolcefino Consulting asked for security footage on some of those violent days, and the maintenance records of all the cameras. Guess they don’t want you to know!

TSU has refused to let you see it, claiming the security camera footage is part of an ongoing investigation by the Houston Police Department.

That doesn’t explain why they don’t want parents to see if the cameras even work, or how long they remain broken.

“TSU is playing games, and parents should demand to know if their kids are in danger from negligent maintenance,” says Wayne Dolcefino, President of Dolcefino Consulting, an investigative communications firm.

Dolcefino Consulting’s request for security camera and maintenance records are part of a wider investigation into cheating, discrimination and security lapses at the Thurgood Marshall School of Law. TSU has already tried to hide records about the cheating scandal from us.

READ: Texas Attorney General request

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