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The Badge That Said "Hard Lockdown": How a Wearable Panic Button Triggered Apalachee's Whole-School Alert in 22 Seconds

GAshootingadvisoryhigh confidence
Confirmed Threat

On the morning of September 4, 2024, 14-year-old Colt Gray opened fire inside Apalachee High School in Winder, Georgia, killing two students and two teachers and wounding nine others. The first CENTEGIX panic-badge press triggered a school-wide "Hard Lockdown" alert at 10:22 a.m. EDT; the Barrow County School System then issued SchoolMessenger texts to parents at approximately 10:45 a.m. EDT. Gray surrendered to school resource officers eight minutes after the initial alert.

Alerts
4
Response
Killed
4
Injured
9
Institution
Apalachee High School (Barrow County School System)
Public Bachelors · GA
CENTEGIX + SchoolMessengerCENTEGIX CrisisAlert / Barrow County SchoolMessenger
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

4 messages in sequence · 3 verified verbatim

Some alert texts below are approximate reconstructions from news coverage, not confirmed verbatim transcripts. Reconstructed texts are shown in italic with a dashed border. Verified verbatim texts have a solid border and are marked accordingly.

INITIAL ALERTSignage
HARD LOCKDOWN
Triggered at 10:22 a.m. EDT on September 4, 2024 by a teacher pressing their CENTEGIX badge eight times — the gesture that initiates a school-wide lockdown
Rendered in large red letters on every classroom smartboard simultaneously, accompanied by strobing lights, a pre-recorded intercom announcement, and silent push notifications to administrators
Teacher Stephen Kreyenbuhl told reporters he knew something was wrong before he heard gunshots because his smartboard had already flashed 'Hard Lockdown' — a sequence enabled by the badge system having been deployed district-wide just one week earlier
The CENTEGIX badges had been active in Barrow County schools for approximately one week before the September 4 incident; multiple teachers pressed their buttons during the attack
UPDATESMS
Approximate reconstruction206 chars
Apalachee High School is currently in a hard lockdown after reports of gunfire. Law enforcement is on scene. Students and staff are sheltering in place. More information will follow as it becomes available.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

Sent approximately 23 minutes after the CENTEGIX panic-button alert, reflecting the time required for administrators to draft and approve outbound parent communication during an active incident
By the time this SchoolMessenger went out, the suspect had already surrendered (10:30 a.m. EDT) but parents had not yet been told the situation was contained — a recurring pattern in active-shooter parent notification
Text reconstructed from AJC paraphrase; the exact wording sent through Barrow County's SchoolMessenger system has not been published verbatim
Three minutes after this message, at 10:48 a.m., student texts to parents from inside the school had already alerted thousands of families before the official notification arrived
UPDATESMS+1h 16m
Haymon-Morris Midd: Parents and Guardians, HMMS is still on a hard lockdown. HMMS students are safe and secure. Please be patient.
Sent from the adjacent Haymon-Morris Middle School — which shares a campus with Apalachee High — 76 minutes after the initial CENTEGIX alert at neighboring AHS
The 'HMMS' prefix abbreviation followed Barrow County's standard SchoolMessenger format, distinguishing this notice from concurrent texts being sent to AHS parents
'HMMS students are safe and secure' was technically accurate (no shots were fired at the middle school) but conflated location with status — a recurring K-12 messaging tension during cascading lockdowns
Truncated SMS character count (130) suggests the message was deliberately written to fit a single 160-character SMS segment for the broadest possible carrier delivery
ALL CLEARSMS
Haymon-Morris Midd: Law enforcement has now given the ok to lift the lockdown … Thank you.
Issued midafternoon after Barrow County Sheriff's Office systematically cleared the building, swept Haymon-Morris Middle, and confirmed the suspect was in custody and no co-conspirators were at large
The ellipsis in 'lift the lockdown … Thank you' is preserved from CNN's reproduction of the text; it appears to mark a sentence boundary the SchoolMessenger system rendered as an ellipsis on some carriers
Even at the all-clear, the message did not specify reunification logistics — Apalachee High families had to await separate guidance to retrieve students from the Barrow County reunification site
Brief 90-character message reflects the tendency of K-12 all-clear texts to under-communicate; parents reported confusion about whether to pick up children, wait for buses, or stay home
Context

Background

On the morning of September 4, 2024, 14-year-old Colt Gray opened fire inside Apalachee High School in Winder, Georgia. Within seconds of the first shots, a teacher pressed their CENTEGIX CrisisAlert badge eight times — the gesture that initiates a school-wide hard lockdown. According to Barrow County Fire Department dispatch records, the first CENTEGIX alert was triggered at 10:22 a.m. EDT; smartboards across the building flashed 'HARD LOCKDOWN' in large red letters, strobing lights activated, and a pre-recorded intercom announcement played. The badge system had been deployed across Barrow County schools for just one week before the shooting. Three school resource officers encountered Gray within minutes; he surrendered at 10:30 a.m. EDT, eight minutes after the initial CENTEGIX trigger. Critically injured victims were evacuated by 10:52 a.m. EDT. The official parent text — sent through the district's SchoolMessenger system at approximately 10:45 a.m. EDT — lagged the CENTEGIX trigger by 23 minutes and arrived after the suspect was already in custody, a sequencing problem that became national news in the days that followed. The case helped accelerate Centegix adoption: Forsyth County, GA approved the same system within weeks, and Georgia Bureau of Investigation testimony credited the technology with shortening response time.
Analysis

Key Findings

The CENTEGIX badge system delivered a school-wide 'HARD LOCKDOWN' alert in approximately 22 seconds — among the fastest documented K-12 emergency notifications in the archive, and 23 minutes faster than the district's SchoolMessenger text to parents
The 8-minute gap between the initial CENTEGIX alert (10:22 a.m. EDT) and the suspect's surrender (10:30 a.m. EDT) demonstrates how on-campus broadcast technology and on-campus law enforcement (three SROs) compress active-shooter timelines below traditional 911-driven response models
The adjacent Haymon-Morris Middle School's text — 'HMMS students are safe and secure' — illustrates a recurring K-12 cascading-lockdown messaging tension: technically accurate location-status statements that elide the broader incident
Barrow County's all-clear text ('Law enforcement has now given the ok to lift the lockdown … Thank you') under-communicated reunification logistics, a documented gap that drove later state-level guidance on post-incident parent communication standards
Outcome
Suspect (14-year-old Colt Gray) surrendered to school resource officers at 10:30 a.m. EDT, charged with murder as an adult. Father Colin Gray also charged. Critically injured patients evacuated by 10:52 a.m. EDT.
Provenance

Sources

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  4. Official
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Tags
shootingactive-shootergeorgiak12barrow-countyapalachee-high-schoolcentegixpanic-buttonhard-lockdownschoolmessengercascading-lockdownhaymon-morriswearable-alert
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion