It's going to take some work to get it done, but getting the ball rolling starts with people discussing ideas and getting those ideas out into the public, and I suspect plenty of parents would get on board with it, and school boards would come out against it.
Any time there is a school shooting, the local school board, the school administrative staff, the LEO administrators, and the responding officers, are all automatically under investigation, and may be brought to court on charges of accomplices to murder.
If they can't prove that they had a plan in place to prevent a school shooting, or at the very least making a concerted effort to implement such a plan, and that they executed to that plan to the best of their ability, they run the risk of being found guilty of accomplices to murder.
If anyone is found to have subverted or compromised any part of a plan to ensure the children's safety, like by propping open a door, they are also guilty of murder.
This is already being done if in the commission of a crime, there is a death that results from the crime being committed. Any time there is a shooting in self defense, there is an investigation (even if it doesn't amount to much).
It's time anyone who works in any area of government gets held to the same standard as the rest of us who pay their wages and benefits.
It's probably going to take a law to make it happen.
Yeah or maybe force disclosure of the entire incident from phone calls to autopsies to body cams automatically. I know the alleged families don't want publicity but if everything pertaining to all s70chool shootings was public record it would be 50x harder to FF. I am super well versed in sandy hook and it was so tight lipped that there is still near zero proof of what happened. Love or hate Alex Jones his entire lawsuit they have intentionally kept from going to trial from what I can tell likely because they don't want any discovery or truth coming out. Maybe Jones is exaggerating but I find it hard to believe this much time has passed and he still hadn't gotten a real trial with a jury (not a law expert so maybe this is normal?)