Following Shooting, Florida VA Hospital Increases Police Presence and Security Checks

Following Shooting, Florida VA Hospital Increases Police Presence and Security Checks

The hospital where a mentally ill veteran opened fire in an emergency room is also home to a congressional office.

Several months after a mentally ill veteran opened fire on doctors and patients at a veterans hospital in Florida, the medical center has taken steps to better secure its facility and address concerns about how the man was able to bring a gun on the property.

Larry Ray Bon, a veteran who was homeless after moving from Michigan to Palm Beach, Florida, brought a gun to the West Palm Beach VA Medical Center in February. Court records showed that he fired six shots before a doctor was able to wrestle the gun away from him. One doctor was hit in the neck, and two others were injured.

Bon reportedly had been inside the hospital for hours before pulling the gun out from under his wheelchair cushion, according to local news outlet WPTV. There were no police officers inside the emergency room where Bon was waiting for medical attention.

The incident raised concerns from patients and medical professionals alike about the hospital’s security. Rep. Brian Mast, who served in the military and has a congressional office in the same hospital, echoed those concerns in a recent interview with WPTV. (The VA has recently told Mast and other representatives that they are being evicted from their offices in VA facilities).

"I would think that would just be common sense that you are checking them for weapons at that point,” Mast said, referring to Bon’s wait time in the emergency room for hours before the shooting. “It's beyond me that it didn't happen.”

Mast, who has been in talks with hospital officials for years about security issues, added that the center is going to have “100 percent ID checks” at every entrance to the facility. The emergency room also has a better police presence in the months following the shooting, Mast said.

"Making sure that there is 24-hour security presence inside of the emergency room, it's an important step in the right direction,” Mast said. “But that begs the question of why shouldn't there be the same presence in other places.”

Despite some requests for metal detectors from patients, the VA is not planning on adding them to the hospital, WPTV reported. In a statement, the VA said it is “committed to ensuring patient and employee safety at all of its medical centers and facilities.” The agency added that the West Palm Beach center provides regular updates on the facility’s security plan to the congressional delegation and most recently did so in August.

That update included the addition of enhanced entrance security and the “inclusion of passive security measures,” the statement reads. More details could not be shared about the nature of those measures because it could jeopardize security.

“It is VA’s goal to ensure health care providers and police personnel work collaboratively while protecting the safety of our unique Veteran population,” the VA said.

Bon is still in police custody but has not been formally indicted by U.S. attorneys as the defense and prosecution assess his mental health. He will have his next hearing on Oct. 21.

About the Author

Haley Samsel is an Associate Content Editor for the Infrastructure Solutions Group at 1105 Media.

Featured

  • Report: 47 Percent of Security Service Providers Are Not Yet Using AI or Automation Tools

    Trackforce, a provider of security workforce management platforms, today announced the launch of its 2025 Physical Security Operations Benchmark Report, an industry-first study that benchmarks both private security service providers and corporate security teams side by side. Based on a survey of over 300 security professionals across the globe, the report provides a comprehensive look at the state of physical security operations. Read Now

    • Guard Services
  • Identity Governance at the Crossroads of Complexity and Scale

    Modern enterprises are grappling with an increasing number of identities, both human and machine, across an ever-growing number of systems. They must also deal with increased operational demands, including faster onboarding, more scalable models, and tighter security enforcement. Navigating these ever-growing challenges with speed and accuracy requires a new approach to identity governance that is built for the future enterprise. Read Now

  • Eagle Eye Networks Launches AI Camera Gun Detection

    Eagle Eye Networks, a provider of cloud video surveillance, recently introduced Eagle Eye Gun Detection, a new layer of protection for schools and businesses that works with existing security cameras and infrastructure. Eagle Eye Networks is the first to build gun detection into its platform. Read Now

  • Report: AI is Supercharging Old-School Cybercriminal Tactics

    AI isn’t just transforming how we work. It’s reshaping how cybercriminals attack, with threat actors exploiting AI to mass produce malicious code loaders, steal browser credentials and accelerate cloud attacks, according to a new report from Elastic. Read Now

  • Pragmatism, Productivity, and the Push for Accountability in 2025-2026

    Every year, the security industry debates whether artificial intelligence is a disruption, an enabler, or a distraction. By 2025, that conversation matured, where AI became a working dimension in physical identity and access management (PIAM) programs. Observations from 2025 highlight this turning point in AI’s role in access control and define how security leaders are being distinguished based on how they apply it. Read Now

New Products

  • QCS7230 System-on-Chip (SoC)

    QCS7230 System-on-Chip (SoC)

    The latest Qualcomm® Vision Intelligence Platform offers next-generation smart camera IoT solutions to improve safety and security across enterprises, cities and spaces. The Vision Intelligence Platform was expanded in March 2022 with the introduction of the QCS7230 System-on-Chip (SoC), which delivers superior artificial intelligence (AI) inferencing at the edge.

  • Luma x20

    Luma x20

    Snap One has announced its popular Luma x20 family of surveillance products now offers even greater security and privacy for home and business owners across the globe by giving them full control over integrators’ system access to view live and recorded video. According to Snap One Product Manager Derek Webb, the new “customer handoff” feature provides enhanced user control after initial installation, allowing the owners to have total privacy while also making it easy to reinstate integrator access when maintenance or assistance is required. This new feature is now available to all Luma x20 users globally. “The Luma x20 family of surveillance solutions provides excellent image and audio capture, and with the new customer handoff feature, it now offers absolute privacy for camera feeds and recordings,” Webb said. “With notifications and integrator access controlled through the powerful OvrC remote system management platform, it’s easy for integrators to give their clients full control of their footage and then to get temporary access from the client for any troubleshooting needs.”

  • Connect ONE’s powerful cloud-hosted management platform provides the means to tailor lockdowns and emergency mass notifications throughout a facility – while simultaneously alerting occupants to hazards or next steps, like evacuation.

    Connect ONE®

    Connect ONE’s powerful cloud-hosted management platform provides the means to tailor lockdowns and emergency mass notifications throughout a facility – while simultaneously alerting occupants to hazards or next steps, like evacuation.