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In October 2018, controversy surrounded a half-time performance by a Jackson, Mississippi, high school band when viral social media posts, as well as local and national news reports, appeared to show students holding toy guns and shooting other students dressed as police officers. Evangelical Christian activist Joshua Feuerstein shared a screen shot from video footage of the performance, writing: In another widely-shared Facebook post, Lisa Grantham pointed out that two police officers had recently been shot dead in Brookhaven, where the football game took place: A post on the web site DefenseMaven.io asserted that the performance had depicted the execution of SWAT officers. These posts prompted multiple inquiries from readers about the facts surrounding these images and the performance itself. The Forest Hill High School band did indeed perform a show which depicted law enforcement officers being held at gunpoint by other student performers during half-time of the Forest Hill Patriots football game held at Brookhaven High School on 5 October 2018. Footage of the performance was streamed live on Facebook by Nick Hodges. The relevant section begins at around the 8:35 mark, and lasts around 35 seconds: The fallout from the performance was significant. On 6 October, Jackson Public Schools Superintendent Errick Greene apologized for the half-time show, which he said had been based loosely on the movie 'John Q' and depicted a hostage scene that included toy guns. Greene said the school district had taken some initial actions in response, including starting an investigation: According to Jackson television station WAPT, the office of Jackson mayor Chokwe Antar Lumumba confirmed that the Forest Hill band's director Demetri Jones had been placed on administrative leave. In response to our request for confirmation of this action, a Jackson Public Schools spokesperson told us we do not discuss personnel matters. In a separate statement, Lumumba expressed his sincerest regrets to the people of Brookhaven: Brookhaven mayor Joe Cox called the half-time show a horrific display of disrespect and referenced the deaths of Brookhaven police officers Zach Moak and James White, who were killed in a shootout on 29 September: In the 2002 thriller movie John Q, Denzel Washington played a desperate father who, with no ability to pay for a heart transplant for his son, took hostages at a hospital at gunpoint, demanding that his son be placed at the top of the organ recipient list. It is worth noting that Washington's character did not actually shoot any law enforcement officers in the movie, just as the Forest Hill parody does not appear to have depicted the shooting of any police officers, but rather an armed hostage-taking. The image used by Feuerstein and others in their social media posts depicted student performers holding SWAT members at gunpoint as the officers held their hands up -- not shooting cops, as Feuerstein claimed, or the execution of SWAT officers, as DefenseMaven.io claimed:
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