Tuff Shed Sierra Vista Az School Shooting
TUCSON, AZ (Tucson News Now) - A teenager has been booked and faces charges after allegedly posting threats via social media to the mall and a school in Sierra Vista over the weekend. On Sunday night the 16-year-old was brought in by his mother to the Sierra Vista Police Department. After speaking with him, authorities booked him on charges of terrorism, threatening, and disruption of an educational facility. However, authorities are not taking any chances. The Sierra Vista Unified School District has been notifying parents and students all evening that it is working with the Sierra Vista Police Department and Cochise County Sheriff's Office to provide added security at all of its schools beginning Monday morning following a threat made via social media. A message posted Sunday evening on the sheriff's Facebook page announced that deputies will be on site at all county schools. The threat was posted on a Facebook page where Sierra Vista residents are invited to share anonymous confessions. A person claiming to be a man between the ages of 30 and 49 said he and some friends were thinking of shooting up the mall in Sierra Vista 'or a school.'
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The police department and sheriff's office are following up on several leads, according to Carol Capas, spokeswoman for the Cochise County Sheriff's Office. All law enforcement and school systems within Cochise County have been notified as a precaution, she said.
Capas added that commenters on the threatening post mentioned seeing similar posts several months ago, and law enforcement is following up on that as well. She could not comment on whether parents should keep their children at home or send them to school, but she said, 'School systems are aware of it and are making sure that they are taking extra precautions.'
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Related Headlines • • • • • PHOENIX (KSAZ) - A Sierra Linda High School student is in deep trouble after another student saw something alarming on social media and reported it to police. It was a photo with a one-line caption posted to SnapChat that said 'Planning the School Shooting.' The user who reported it to police lives in North-Glenn Colorado, and the boy accused of making the threat lives here in Phoenix; the two had never met. SnapChat is a popular app among teens and young adults that lets users take videos or photos, caption them, and share them instantly with other friends who are also on SnapChat. The photo or video is then supposed to disappear, but the alert Colorado student who saw the post saved it, and then showed it to police.
'It said planning the school shooting, it freaked me out at first, so I texted my mom,' said Kaylee Helton. Kaylee took a screenshot of the post and saved it.
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Once you save a photo on SnapChat, it alerts the person who posted it. 'So he SnapChatted me and asked me why I screenshotted his story,' said Helton. That dialogue led to the Sierra Linda student's identity. Kaylee told her principal and a school resource officer, who then alerted Phoenix Police.
It turns out the word spread faster on social media than it did on the actual campus near 67th Avenue and Lower Buckeye. 'Some kid posted he threatened to shoot up our school on SnapChat, some kid in Denver saw it and contacted Phoenix Police, and they found him with guns in his backpack,' said Ethan Clay. The kids didn't find out about the incident until police had already identified and arrested him. 'It's a relief you know, I don't want anything to happen to my school, it's my senior year,' said Valeria Hernandez. One student called Kaylee a hero for reporting the threat.
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