Denver Public Schools’ Board of Education properly noticed and convened an executive session when members met behind closed doors the day after the March shooting inside East High School, the school district’s attorney argued in court Friday. The Denver Post and five other Colorado news organizations are suing DPS, alleging the school board violated the Colorado Open Meetings Law and seeking the release of the recording of the closed-door meeting. “This is really just about a gotcha case,” DPS attorney Jonathan Fero told Denver District Court Judge Andrew Luxen during Friday’s hearing on the news organizations’ lawsuit. The school board met in an executive session — which is closed to the public — on March 23, the day after a student shot and injured two administrators inside East, the city’s largest high school. When board members emerged from the meeting five hours later, they announced they would temporarily suspend a 2020 board policy banning school resource officers, or SROs, allowing armed police to return to high schools for the remainder of the academic year.