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Killing of Scout Schultz
Killing of Scout Schultz
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Killing of Scout Schultz
DateSeptember 16, 2017 (2017-09-16)
Location532 8th Street NW, Atlanta, Georgia, U.S.
Participants4 Georgia Tech Police Department officers, including Tyler Beck
DeathsScout Schultz

On September 16, 2017, Scout Schultz, a 21-year-old student of the Georgia Institute of Technology, was shot once and killed by Tyler Beck, an officer of the Georgia Tech Police Department. Schultz had summoned police to the scene by making a false claim that someone was standing outside their dorm with a knife and a gun. They then stood outside the dorm carrying a multitool. When the police arrived, Schultz walked towards the police, asking them to shoot. The multitool contained a screwdriver and a short blade that was not out, but given the earlier call, the police believed that Schultz was holding a gun.

The incident was followed by protests and civil unrest, which led to multiple arrests. Schultz's parents filed a wrongful death suit. The shooting was investigated by the Georgia Bureau of Investigation. In March 2020, it was announced that Tyler Beck would not face charges.

In 2018, Scout's shooting led to the creation of a $1,000,000 fund to improve mental health, from which came the Intercollegiate Mental Health Conference, the first student-run national conference on college mental health policy at Georgia Tech. This led to the creation of a new LGBTQ+ center and other resources.

Background

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Scout Schultz was born in Rockville, Maryland in 1995.[1][2][3] They were born with a possible intersex condition.[1] The Schultz family later moved to Lilburn, Georgia.[2][4]

Scout was a fourth year computer engineering major at Georgia Institute of Technology,[2][5] and expected to graduate a semester early according to their father.[3] They were bisexual, nonbinary, and intersex and used singular they pronouns.[6] They were the president of Pride Alliance on campus.[5][4]

Schultz, who suffered from clinical depression, had spent time in counseling after attempting suicide by hanging in 2015.[7]

Shooting

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Schultz, a 21-year-old student at the Georgia Institute of Technology, called 9-1-1 on September 16, 2017, around 11:17 p.m. They said there was a suspicious person on campus with a knife and possibly a gun. They gave a description matching their own appearance, saying that the person had long blond hair, a white t-shirt, and blue jeans, and said that the person might be intoxicated.[8][9]

Four police officers approached Schultz outside a dormitory on campus.[8][10] They had a multitool, which included a small knife, but no gun.[9] According to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, the multitool's blade was not extended.[11] However, given the earlier call and the lack of light, the police suspected that it was a gun. Schultz refused to drop the multitool and walked towards the police, with their arms hanging down, while shouting "shoot me!"[2][12] Schultz was then shot and pronounced dead shortly after at the Grady Memorial Hospital.[8] The incident was captured on a cell-phone video.[12]

Three suicide notes were found in Schultz's dorm room.[9]

The police officer who shot them was identified as Tyler Beck.[10] According to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, "Beck was certified by the Georgia Peace Officer and Standards Training Council (POST) but had not undergone Crisis Intervention Training, which trains police on how to handle mentally ill suspects."[10] Shortly after the shooting, Beck was put on paid leave.[13]

Aftermath

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Schultz's family attorney, Chris Stewart, said that the police overreacted.[5] Stewart said the idea that the death was a "suicide by cop" did not justify the shooting.[14] He also said, "The area was secured. There was no one around at risk."[6] Schultz's mother, Lynne Schultz, suggested that the police should have used pepper spray or Tasers instead of gunning them down.[7] (According to a spokesman, Georgia Tech police are equipped with pepper spray, but not tasers.)[9] Scout's father, William Schultz, said at a news conference, "Why did you have to shoot? That's the only question that matters right now. Why did you kill my son?"[15]

G. P. "Bud" Peterson, the president of Georgia Tech, said the shooting was a "heart-wrenchingly painful time" for the university.[16] Despite Schultz not finishing senior year, Georgia Tech awarded them a diploma.[17]

The shooting was investigated by the Georgia Bureau of Investigation.[7] In September 2018, with the investigation still on-going, the parents announced that they had grown frustrated with the lack of criminal charges.[17] Schultz's parents filed a wrongful death suit naming the university, Tyler Beck, and the Georgia Board of Regents in September 2019.[18]

In March 2020, the county's district attorney announced that Beck would not face charges, saying that, according to use-of-force experts, the shooting was justified.[14]

In December 2021, Georgia Tech announced a settlement with the family of Schultz for $1 million.[19]

Vigil and protest

[edit]

A peaceful vigil for Schultz was held on campus on September 18, 2017.[20]

Twenty minutes later, about 50 protesters marched through campus[21] while carrying a banner which read "Protect LGBTQ" and chanting "Justice Now".[20] The protest turned violent and a police car was set on fire.[22] Three people were arrested, one of them a Georgia Tech student.[13] They were charged with "inciting a riot and battery of an officer."[20] In the following weeks three more people were arrested for "misdemeanor obstruction of law enforcement."[23] Schultz's parents appealed for calm.[24]

On September 22, a teach-in and protest occurred at Georgia Tech, which led to the Student Center building being closed early at 3 p.m.[25]

Legacy and impact

[edit]

In 2018, in response to Schultz's death, queer student leaders established the Mental Health Joint Allocations Committee, a $1,000,000 fund to improve campus mental health. These funds have been allocated towards a new LGBTQ+ center, telemental health services, therapeutic biotechnologies, and health systems research.[26]

In February 2019, the committee contributed funds to the Intercollegiate Mental Health Conference, the first national student-run research initiative to identify best practices and policies for college mental health. From this data, $300,000 in grant funding was established to improve the mental health of vulnerable populations.[27]

See also

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References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The killing of Scout Schultz was the fatal shooting of a 21-year-old Georgia Institute of Technology student by campus police officer Tyler Beck on September 16, 2017, outside a dormitory after Schultz advanced on responding officers while holding a multi-purpose tool equipped with a knife, ignored multiple commands to drop the object, and shouted "shoot me." Schultz had initiated the encounter by calling 911 at approximately 11:17 p.m. to report a suspicious white male—matching Schultz's own description—with a knife and possibly a gun near the location, but officers encountered only Schultz upon arrival at 532 Eighth Street N.W. in Atlanta. A taser deployment proved ineffective, prompting Beck—who had served 16 months with the department and lacked specialized crisis intervention training—to fire a single shot, after which Schultz was transported to Grady Memorial Hospital and pronounced dead. The Georgia Bureau of Investigation's examination of the scene recovered the multi-tool but no firearm, and discovered three suicide notes in Schultz's dormitory room, consistent with evidence of depression and a prior suicide attempt acknowledged by Schultz's parents. Fulton County District Attorney Paul Howard reviewed the case, including video footage depicting Schultz's provocation and opinions from two use-of-force experts deeming the response justified, ultimately declining to pursue criminal charges against Beck in March 2020. Schultz's family filed a wrongful death lawsuit against Georgia Tech, the Board of Regents, and Beck alleging excessive force and inadequate training, which settled for $1 million in 2021 without admission of liability. The event ignited protests criticizing police tactics, though official findings pointed to Schultz's deliberate non-compliance and apparent intent to elicit a lethal shooting as the causal sequence. Schultz, who identified as non-binary and participated in LGBTQ advocacy at the university, became a focal point for discussions on mental health resources and officer preparation for crises, prompting Georgia Tech to establish funds and task forces in response.

Background

Scout Schultz's Personal History

Scout Schultz was born Scott Patrick Schultz on December 7, 1995, in , to parents William and Lynne Schultz. Initially raised by their mother Lynne for the first 18 months, Schultz was later adopted by stepfather Bill Schultz following his marriage to Lynne. The family experienced frequent relocations due to parental employment, including periods in , , and —where financial hardship briefly forced them to live in a —before settling in . Schultz attended Parkview High School in Lilburn, graduating with honors. The family reported Schultz was born with , a congenital urinary tract malformation sometimes associated with traits. Schultz also managed chronic conditions including and migraines from an early age. In summer 2014, Schultz enrolled at the Georgia Institute of Technology as a major, earning a and achieving a 3.9 GPA through the semester prior to their death; they were also fluent in Latin. Schultz had one and was survived by grandparents T. Scott and Carolyn Ankrum, as well as sisters Hayley Schultz and Marie Kessel.

Mental Health and Activism

Schultz had a documented history of challenges, including clinical depression and . In approximately 2015, while residing in a dormitory, Schultz attempted using a belt attached to a ; the belt snapped, resulting in no physical injury. Following this incident, Schultz received counseling through 's services, which were constrained by limited staffing—one counselor per approximately 1,500 students and a 16-session cap—and later pursued off-campus treatment including medication, funded by family insurance, which family members reported led to noticeable improvement after several months. These struggles persisted amid stressors such as relationship difficulties and organizational challenges within student groups. Schultz left three suicide notes in their backpack, discovered after the September 16, 2017, incident. Schultz was actively involved in campus activism, particularly as president of the Pride Alliance—an LGBTQ student advocacy organization—for a second term by 2017, during which they organized recruitment events on the Tech Green and supported broader initiatives like Tech Ends Together. In early 2017, Schultz co-founded the Progressive Student Alliance and participated in affiliated protests, including a March 3, 2017, march opposing Georgia House Bill 51, which sought to limit investigations into claims. Schultz also engaged with and the , and led additional marches in support of Muslim students at .

The Incident

The 911 Call and Initial Response

On September 16, 2017, Scout , a 21-year-old Georgia Institute of Technology student, placed a 911 call to campus police at approximately 11:30 p.m. reporting a suspicious individual near the Skiles Classroom Building. In the call, Schultz described the person as "skulking around outside," possibly intoxicated, holding a knife in one hand, and potentially armed with a on their hip. The dispatcher inquired about the subject's appearance, clothing, and exact location, with Schultz providing details including the individual's proximity to a parking deck. The audio recording of the call, released publicly on September 19, 2017, captures Schultz speaking in a relatively calm tone while relaying the information, though subsequent investigation revealed Schultz was the subject of the report and was experiencing a crisis at the time. Schultz identified themselves to the dispatcher when asked, confirming their name as "Scout Schultz." Georgia Tech Police Department officers, including Officer Tyler Beck, were dispatched immediately in response to the report of an armed suspicious person, arriving within minutes at the specified location outside the Clough Undergraduate Learning Commons parking deck. Upon arrival, officers observed an individual matching the 911 description—later identified as —approaching them while holding an object that appeared to be a , though it was a with a partially extended blade. The officers initiated verbal commands to drop the weapon and attempted , with multiple officers present to contain the situation before it escalated further.

Confrontation and Shooting

On September 16, 2017, at approximately 11:17 p.m., Police Department officers responded to a 911 call reporting a suspicious individual near the Skiles Classroom Building on the campus, described as armed with a and possibly a . The caller, later identified as Scout Schultz, was the subject of the report and was located in a deck at , holding a device with a blade extended, resembling a . Multiple officers, including Officer Tyler Beck—who had been employed by the department for 16 months—arrived and repeatedly commanded Schultz to drop the weapon and stop advancing. Schultz, who appeared to be in emotional distress, ignored the orders, shouted phrases including "Shoot me!", and moved toward the officers while holding the blade out. Video footage from the scene captured Schultz within 5 to 10 feet of Beck, continuing to approach despite commands and the presence of non-lethal options like tasers deployed by other officers. Beck fired a single shot from his service weapon, striking Schultz in the midsection at close range, causing Schultz to collapse. Officers immediately rendered aid, including CPR, until paramedics arrived; Schultz was pronounced dead at a shortly thereafter. The took over the inquiry into the , noting the responding officers' perception of an imminent threat due to the proximity and refusal to comply.

Criminal Investigation

The (GBI) assumed responsibility for the criminal investigation into the officer-involved shooting of Scout Schultz on September 17, 2017, at midnight, at the request of the Georgia Tech Police Department (GTPD), following standard protocol for such incidents in Georgia. The probe focused on reconstructing the events of September 16, 2017, beginning with Schultz's 911 call at 11:17 p.m. reporting a suspicious white male—later determined to be a description matching Schultz himself—possibly armed with a knife and gun near the Clough Commons dormitory. GBI agents processed the scene at 532 Eighth Street N.W., recovering a multi-purpose tool containing a knife from Schultz's possession, with no firearms located despite the 911 report. A search of Schultz's uncovered three notes, indicating premeditated intent. The investigation included interviews with responding GTPD officers, who reported issuing multiple verbal commands to drop the weapon, deploying a , and observing Schultz advancing aggressively before Officer Tyler Beck fired a single shot at close range. The GBI Medical Examiner's Office in Decatur conducted the , confirming the as a to the chest, with Schultz pronounced dead at shortly after the shooting. The GBI's independent inquiry, which spanned several months, examined officer training, use-of-force protocols, and compliance with Georgia law, including whether Beck—who had been employed by GTPD for 16 months—faced imminent threat. By December 2017, the GBI completed its findings and forwarded the case file to the Fulton County District Attorney's Office for review, without recommending charges at that stage. No evidence of criminal misconduct by officers emerged from the GBI's evidence analysis, which emphasized Schultz's non-compliance and weapon brandishing.

District Attorney's Ruling

On March 13, 2020, Fulton County District Attorney Paul Howard announced that Police Department Officer Tyler Beck would not face criminal charges in the fatal shooting of Scout Schultz on September 16, 2017. Howard's office concluded that the use of was justified under Georgia law, which permits such action when an officer reasonably believes it necessary to prevent imminent death or great bodily harm to themselves or others. The decision followed a review by two independent use-of-force experts, who determined that 's actions were reasonable given the circumstances. Schultz had approached officers wielding a as a , ignored repeated verbal commands to drop it and stop advancing, and continued forward in a manner perceived as threatening, closing the distance to within arm's reach of the officers. Video evidence and witness accounts supported that non-lethal options like tasers had been deployed but failed to incapacitate Schultz, and Beck fired a single shot only after Schultz lunged toward him. The experts aligned with the Georgia Bureau of Investigation's findings that Beck faced an imminent threat. Schultz's family contested the ruling, arguing that police should have employed additional de-escalation tactics given Schultz's apparent crisis, as indicated by the initial 911 call reporting suicidal behavior. However, emphasized that the totality of the evidence, including Schultz's refusal to comply and active aggression, did not support criminal liability, closing the without prosecution.

Civil Litigation and Settlement

The parents of Scout Schultz, William and Lynne Schultz, filed a wrongful death lawsuit on September 11, 2019, in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia against the Board of Regents of the University System of Georgia, Georgia Tech Police Department Officer Tyler Beck, and other officials. The complaint, brought by the Estate of Scott Schultz, alleged that Beck used excessive force in violation of the Fourth Amendment, that the police department failed to adequately train officers on de-escalation and handling mental health crises, and that supervisors neglected to intervene or employ non-lethal options despite Schultz posing no immediate threat. It sought compensatory and punitive damages, claiming the shooting resulted from systemic deficiencies rather than justified self-defense. The highlighted Schultz's history of issues and the nature of the 911 call as a non-emergency report of a "suspicious person" scratching a , arguing that responding officers escalated the situation unnecessarily by advancing with weapons drawn instead of using techniques. Defendants maintained that acted in accordance with training and policy, firing only after Schultz ignored commands, advanced while holding a small object (later identified as a ), and exhibited erratic behavior consistent with a . On December 2, 2021, the parties reached a settlement under which the state of Georgia agreed to pay the Schultz family $1 million, resolving all claims without any admission of liability by the defendants. This amount was reported as among the highest settlements for similar cases involving university police in Georgia history, though it did not include provisions for policy changes or officer discipline. The agreement concluded the litigation four years after the incident, amid ongoing debates over in mental health encounters, but civil standards of proof differ from criminal ones, where a grand jury had declined to indict in 2018.

Public and Media Reactions

Protests and Vigils

A for Scout Schultz was held on the campus on September 18, 2017, drawing several hundred attendees to commemorate the student activist killed by campus police two days earlier. The event initially remained peaceful, focusing on mourning and calls for , but transitioned into protests that escalated into overnight. Clashes between protesters and police resulted in a damaged police , injuries to two officers, and the of three individuals charged with inciting a . officials reported that the disturbances disrupted campus operations, leading to a somber atmosphere the following day amid heightened security. Additional demonstrations occurred on September 22, 2017, with protesters gathering to demand accountability for the shooting, though these did not escalate to the same level of violence. On the first anniversary of the incident, September 24, 2018, two separate memorial events took place on campus: a formal gathering organized by groups and a emphasizing Schultz's advocacy for LGBTQ+ issues and awareness. These later observances remained non-violent and focused on reflection rather than confrontation with authorities.

Media Coverage and Narratives

Initial media reports on the September 16, 2017, shooting of Scout by campus police described the incident as the fatal encounter with a 21-year-old non-binary student and president of the campus Pride Alliance, often emphasizing Schultz's identity and activism alongside a reported crisis. Outlets such as and portrayed the event as a police following a 911 call about a suspicious person with a knife, noting Schultz's advance toward officers while yelling "Shoot me." Coverage quickly incorporated details from footage and accounts, including Schultz ignoring repeated commands to drop the object—a multi-tool initially described by the (GBI) as a knife—before being shot once in the chest. Prominent narratives framed Schultz's death as a failure of and response, with advocates and family members, via their attorney, arguing that campus police overreacted by resorting to lethal force absent non-lethal options like Tasers, which officers did not carry at the time. National media, including and Vox, highlighted broader systemic issues, such as inadequate resources for LGBTQ students—who face elevated rates of depression and —and called for improved police in handling crises involving gender-nonconforming individuals. In contrast, local reporting from introduced the "suicide by cop" interpretation, citing Schultz's history of depression, prior attempt, and discovery of three notes, while experts defended the officer's actions as compliant with protocols given the perceived imminent threat from the advancing figure. Protests following the shooting amplified activist-driven narratives of police brutality, with vigils evolving into clashes involving self-identified Antifa demonstrators who damaged property and injured officers, drawing media attention to unrest rather than incident forensics. Schultz's family publicly condemned the violence, urging peaceful reform, yet coverage in outlets like The Guardian and Vox linked the demonstrations to outrage over the shooting, portraying them as responses to institutional failures despite Schultz having initiated the 911 call describing themselves. In-depth investigations, such as The Atavist Magazine's 2018 feature, critiqued how initial headlines echoed police descriptions of a "knife-wielding" subject, which the family contested by displaying the closed , while noting media's rapid shift to protest drama over evidentiary details like autopsy findings (no intoxicants present) or the GBI's trajectory analysis supporting the threat assessment. Coverage waned after early October 2017, with national outlets largely ceasing follow-up amid the absence of further riots, despite ongoing investigations that culminated in the Fulton County District Attorney's 2020 ruling of justified force— a determination minimally reflected in retrospective media. This pattern underscored tensions between immediate identity-focused victim narratives in progressive-leaning sources and fact-based justifications in local or investigative accounts, where Schultz's non-compliance and verbal provocation were central but often subordinated to calls for policy overhaul.

Controversies and Analyses

Justification of Police Action

Police officers responded to a 911 call on September 16, 2017, reporting a suspicious individual near Georgia Tech's Freshman Townhouses who appeared intoxicated, was damaging property, and was possibly armed with a knife and a . Upon arrival, Schultz approached the officers while holding a multi-tool device with its blade extended, ignoring repeated verbal commands to stop advancing and drop the object. footage captured Schultz yelling phrases such as "Shoot me!" while continuing to move toward Officer Tyler Beck, who fired a single shot when Schultz was approximately 6 to 8 feet away, perceiving an imminent threat of harm from the pointed tool. The use of was deemed justified under Georgia , which permits officers to employ such measures when they reasonably believe it necessary to defend against imminent or great bodily . Fulton County District Attorney Paul Howard's office, after a review by the involving witness interviews, forensic analysis, and video evidence, concluded in March 2020 that Beck's actions met this standard, as Schultz's non-compliance and forward movement with a perceived edged created a reasonable fear for officer safety. No criminal charges were filed against Beck, aligning with precedents where advancing suspects armed with blades, even at close range, justify lethal response to neutralize the threat without awaiting contact. Defenders of the action emphasized the dynamic risks of the encounter: multiple officers had deployed tasers and issued over 20 commands to halt, but Schultz's erratic behavior and proximity left no viable non-lethal options without risking injury. The , while not a full , functioned as a potential instrument, and the initial 911 report of possible firearms heightened the perceived danger, compelling officers to treat the situation as high-risk from the outset. This assessment prioritizes the objective indicators available to officers in real-time—advancement despite de-escalation attempts—over subsequent revelations of Schultz's struggles or suicidal intent, which do not retroactively negate the threat posed.

Mental Health and Behavioral Factors

Scout Schultz had a documented history of clinical depression and had attempted in 2015, an incident in which the belt used snapped without causing physical injury. Schultz's mother, Lynne Schultz, confirmed the depression and prior attempt, noting that her child had sought counseling both on and off the campus, including medication covered by family insurance, with periods of apparent improvement following treatment. In the days leading up to the September 16, 2017, encounter, behavioral indicators pointed to escalating , including giving away personal items such as Magic: The Gathering cards to a friend accompanied by a note of gratitude, and leaving three suicide notes in the dorm room, as reported by the . initiated the police response by placing a 911 call reporting a suspicious intruder attempting to break into their dorm—a description later determined to be fabricated—while carrying a with a . During the confrontation outside a campus dormitory, Schultz exhibited acute crisis behaviors: advancing barefoot toward officers while holding the aloft in a manner perceived as a , repeatedly ignoring commands to drop the object and stop, and shouting "Shoot me!" multiple times, actions consistent with suicide-by-cop provocation amid a mental breakdown as described by attorney L. Chris Stewart. These non-compliant and escalatory actions unfolded over approximately five minutes, culminating in Schultz closing to within 20 feet of the shooting officer despite de-escalation attempts including non-lethal options like a . The acknowledgment of ongoing struggles underscores how untreated or breakthrough episodes can manifest in deliberate risk-taking behaviors that heighten danger in police interactions.

Broader Debates on Police Encounters

The killing of Scout Schultz has been cited in discussions regarding police protocols for crises, particularly on campuses where officers often respond to welfare checks involving students in distress. Advocates argue that incidents like this underscore the need for expanded training (CIT), noting that Georgia requires only four hours of such training for academy graduates, which some experts deem insufficient for de-escalating encounters with individuals exhibiting erratic behavior or . Schultz's case, where the student reportedly uttered "Shoot me" while advancing with an object perceived as a despite repeated commands to drop it, highlights a recurring tension: whether enhanced training can reliably prevent escalation when subjects ignore verbal directives and pose perceived threats. Law enforcement perspectives emphasize that officers are trained to prioritize threat neutralization over in scenarios involving potential , as wounding shots are unreliable and increase risk to responders; in Schultz's encounter, the officer fired after the closed distance without compliance, aligning with standard use-of-force doctrines that view advancing armed suspects as imminent dangers. Empirical indicates that individuals in crises represent 16-24% of fatal police shootings nationwide, a disproportionate share attributed not solely to response flaws but to behavioral factors like non-compliance and possession, which amplify lethality regardless of . Critics, including Schultz's attorney, contend officers "overreacted" by resorting to lethal force without exhausting non-lethal options like additional tasers, fueling broader calls to reform policies prioritizing professionals over armed patrols for such calls. However, analyses of similar cases reveal that "suicide-by-cop" dynamics, evident in Schultz's self-initiated 911 call and provocative actions, complicate outcomes, as officers cannot presuppose non-violent intent amid ambiguous threats. The incident also intersects with debates on campus policing, where Georgia Tech's settlement included commitments to bolster high-stress crisis and resources, reflecting a post-event push for alternatives like co-responder models pairing officers with clinicians. Yet, first-responder realities persist: data from police encounters show that involvement correlates with higher injury rates to officers due to unpredictable aggression, suggesting that while mitigates some risks, it cannot eliminate the need for defensive when compliance fails. These debates extend to systemic questions, such as diverting low-threat calls to unarmed teams, though implementation challenges in resource-strapped university settings limit scalability, as evidenced by ongoing disparities in outcomes for distressed individuals across jurisdictions.

Impact on Georgia Tech and Policy Changes

In response to the September 16, 2017, shooting of student Scout Schultz, established four action teams in late September 2017 to assess and recommend improvements in services, campus culture, LGBTQ issues, and public safety procedures. These teams produced recommendations by early November 2017, leading to the "A Path Forward" initiative, under which over 50 of 180 proposed actions were implemented or in progress by September 2018. Georgia Tech Police Department (GTPD) reforms included mandating 40-hour Team (CIT) training for all 89 sworn officers, which incorporates techniques for crises, and equipping every officer with a —none of which were available during the incident. The department also introduced transgender awareness training for officers, informed by student input. Mental health enhancements involved temporarily lifting the 16-session limit on counseling, securing a $500,000 student government pledge matched by the administration for services, and establishing a $1 million endowment for wellness programs and police training; President G.P. "Bud" Peterson additionally created a dedicated fund that received a $1 million by 2018. The LGBTQIA Resource Center was expanded and renovated, opening in fall 2018, with added gender-neutral bathroom signage across campus. These measures were cited by Schultz's family as significant outcomes in their 2021 $1 million settlement with the university.

References

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