Fairfax County Public Schools to deploy new detection scanners at 15 high schools after spring break
This comes as the Fairfax County Public Schools () announced last week that it will kick off its Pilot Weapons Detection System in high schools starting on April 21.
The pilot program involves deploying 15 scanners, also known as OpenGate devices, to a randomly selected high school or high schools. School officials said at least one school, each week, will be chosen by the Office of Safety and Security for screenings.
After, the devices will remain at the school for one to several days.
Youngkin declares Virginia Screen-Free Week
The scanners will be provided by a company called CEIA and are designed to screen large numbers of people. The free-standing detectors are portable and can be used indoors or outdoors.
The weapons detection scanners will be used when students arrive for class in the morning. A team of the FCPS's Office of Safety and Security and school-based security personnel will manage and monitor the entry process as students walk through the detectors.
Before walking through, students must remove their laptops from their backpacks.
School officials noted the devices are more sensitive than traditional metal detectors and can more accurately identify metal sources that may be potentially harmful. This includes knives, guns, and materials or components used to make explosive devices.
The scanners may also alert for numerous items that are allowed in schools, including 3-ring binders, laptops, eyeglass cases, umbrellas, metal lunchboxes or pencil cases.
'It just felt like home': Sandy Spring Friends School to close after more than 60 years
If the alarm sounds, students will step to the side for a secondary screening to determine the cause of the alert.
According to FCPS, the purpose of the secondary screening is the determine the reason for the alarm. These screenings will be done by school security, administration or trained staff who have been designated to monitor these situations.
If a weapon or illegal substance is discovered during the screenings, the police will take the prohibited items, and the student who brought the items onto campus might face charges.
The pilot program will run through the end of the 2024-25 school year.
The school district said it plans to expand the weapons detection program to the 2025-26 school year based on staffing needs and funding.
For more information about the scanners, click .
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CBS News
22-06-2025
- CBS News
Northern Colorado man arrested, accused of selling marijuana to minors
A man in northern Colorado is facing drug charges after he allegedly sold marijuana to minors through social media. According to the Fort Collins Police Department, officers and Loveland Police SWAT arrested Garett Van Mullins on Thursday as part of an ongoing investigation into underage marijuana sales. Larimer County Sheriff's Office Police said they believe Van Mullins has been using social media sites under the monikers "420 Minister" and "I Am Foundation Church" to sell marijuana. Van Mullins is facing charges of unlawful distribution of marijuana to a minor, a class 3 felony. Authorities asked anyone with information on the case or who believes their teenager purchased from him to contact FCPS Marijuana Enforcement Officer Jim Lenderts at (970) 416-2949 or jlenderts@

Yahoo
06-06-2025
- Yahoo
Former Rock Creek School secretary ordered to serve 15 days in jail, pay restitution for theft scheme
A Frederick woman on Thursday was ordered to serve 15 days in jail and pay $23,800 in restitution to Frederick County Public Schools for stealing from the Student Activities Fund at Rock Creek School, where she worked. Rebecca Mae Main, 65, pleaded guilty on March 6 to one count of theft scheme between $1,500 and $25,000. The theft scheme lasted from 2020 to 2023 while Main worked as an administrative secretary at the school. Rock Creek School, a part of FCPS, provides individualized special education programs for students age 3 to 21 with severe intellectual, physical, emotional, hearing, visual and learning disabilities, according to its website. Over the course of the theft scheme, prosecutors said, Main made out three dozen checks to herself and deposited them into her personal bank account. The checks were supposedly reimbursements for money that Main spent on behalf of the school, but FCPS had no record of why the checks were sent, The Frederick News-Post previously reported. During a hearing in Frederick County District Court on Thursday, Assistant State's Attorney Morgan McLaughlin said that, although Main had no prior criminal record, the theft scheme amounted to "a brazen and continuous course of conduct" that directly harmed the county's neediest students. McLaughlin said Main's original sentencing hearing was postponed for 90 days to allow time for her to come up with money to repay the school system. He said he did not consider the $400 Main came prepared to pay on Thursday "a good faith" effort on that front. According to McLaughlin, FCPS wanted to send a staff member to speak at the sentencing hearing on Thursday, but could not because it is so close to the end of the school year. He said the school system sent a letter instead. FCPS acknowledged, but did not respond to, a request for comment about Main's case on Thursday. Gabriella Farago, a public defender who represented Main at the sentencing hearing, said the theft scheme took place against the backdrop of severe medical issues and financial problems Main was having. "Sometimes when bad things happen to us, we make the wrong choices," Farago said. "I'm very sorry and I regret it," Main told the court on Thursday. "I'll do everything I have to to rectify this." She did not say anything more in her statement to the court. Frederick County District Court Judge Eric Schaffer on Thursday said that while "everybody has financial issues, not everybody steals." He sentenced Main to five years in prison and suspended all but 15 days. Schaffer also ordered Main to serve five years of supervised probation, but said she could file for early termination if she pays the full amount of restitution before then. As a condition of her probation, Main will not be allowed to return to the Rock Creek school or to FCPS in general. "You're going to see the inside of a jail cell for 15 days," Schaffer said. "I want you to think about what you did," he continued. "I'll take a very dim view of you if you don't make these victims whole."


Axios
05-06-2025
- Axios
Virginia is a hot spot for immigration enforcement
Virginia is one of five states where efforts to arrest and remove unauthorized immigrants appear most aggressive, according to an Axios analysis. Why it matters: Over 2,000 Virginians received removal orders in March, the fifth-highest number nationwide, per data from the nonpartisan Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse (TRAC). By the numbers: Of the 42,000 removals of immigrants ordered in March, over 300 were from the Richmond area, according to an analysis of TRAC data. Richmond had 126, followed by Chesterfield (116) and Henrico (81). And Fairfax County was in the top 10 U.S. localities for most immigrants ordered removed (504). The big picture: Our review of removal orders and agreements between immigration officials and local law enforcement agencies shows where the Trump administration is dispatching resources for mass deportations. Local law enforcement agencies in Virginia, Texas, Florida, Georgia and North Carolina have been most cooperative with immigration enforcement in rounding up immigrants through deals known as 287(g) agreements, per our analysis. Virginia has a fraction (over 3%) of the 629 agreements in place nationwide, but it has the fifth-highest number signed or pending. Between the lines: Virginia's 21 signed and pending agreements are still less than 10% of the hundreds of localities and state agencies throughout the commonwealth. Most, except for Loudoun, are concentrated in Republican-leaning counties. Others are among state agencies, including the Virginia Department for Wildlife Resources and the Marine Resources Commission. And some police officials, including Richmond's chief of police, have said they have no interest in signing and potentially undermining the communities' trust. Zoom in: Gov. Youngkin, like governors in other GOP-led states, directed state law enforcement to partner with ICE and assist in arresting immigrants back in February via these agreements. It has since led to a series of high-profile raids, including hundreds in Northern Virginia and a few in an Albemarle courthouse, that have rattled immigrant communities. In February, Virginia also launched the first task force in the country that partners with federal agencies to target illegal immigration and international gangs. In May, Youngkin announced that the task force had arrested over 1,000 alleged unauthorized immigrants within two months. Reality check: Neither Youngkin or federal officials have publicly disclosed who these people are or how they're identifying that they have ties to gangs like MS-13 or Tren de Aragua.