Archive for Friday, February 22, 2008
Campus threats rack nerves
Nerves are raw at area campuses after potential threats of violence emerged at two Southland schools, coming at the end of a month that has seen a spate of deadly shootings across the nation.
Many parents of students at one
“After what’s been going on around the country, you start to recognize anything is possible these days,” said Anaheim Police Sgt. Rick Martinez. “You certainly can’t dismiss it. That’s for sure.”
The heightened concerns come in an unusually busy month for school shootings, which have taken place on at least six campuses nationwide, killing 10 and wounding 19.
The most recent occurred Valentine’s Day, when a former graduate student killed five people and himself at
School violence experts said a spike in campus scares was not surprising in the aftermath of shootings. Copycats seek media attention, while educators and students are on heightened alert, said Philip Mullendore, executive director for the
“People are scared because it’s happening so much more frequently,” said Mullendore, former chief of the
The Southern California scares were among several nationwide this week.
Dozens of campuses in southwest
In Anaheim, a cryptic message in the Savanna High School campus newspaper prompted police to step up patrols and was expected to result in widespread absenteeism today.
The note was among 150 messages printed in the “Love Gram” section of the paper on the day before Valentine’s Day and read, “To: Metal Destroyer Militia. Remember guys – We all go down 2/22!! Let’s quit stalling!! Much Love! 666! All the way baby!”
School officials said students “magnified” the severity of the note through text messages and posts on MySpace.com. The school began an investigation last week and intensified campus security.
“Savanna High will probably be the safest place in the region Friday,” said Anaheim Union High School District Supt. Joseph M. Farley.
Still, some parents plan to keep their children home.
“It looks like it’s probably just a joke, but I’m taking it seriously,” said Margaret Witham, who has two children at Savanna. “I’d rather my kids be safe than have something happen. Why take a chance? It’s one day of school. That’s my children’s life.”
Witham’s daughter, Nadasha, said the media has blown the potential threat out of proportion. But the senior said the shootings in Oxnard and Illinois increased anxiety on the Anaheim campus.
“If the person who wrote the note was playing it as a joke, I don’t think it’s a good time to be joking around like that,” she said.
At Cal State Dominguez Hills in Carson, a father dropped off his daughter about 8 a.m. Thursday and noticed a man carrying what appeared to be an assault rifle near a sculpture garden. He called 911, prompting
Melissa Romero, 19, of Carson was in geography class when the lockdown occurred. She text-messaged her parents to tell them she was safe.
“I was scared,” the theater arts major said. “I told them I loved them and I’m sorry for messing up sometimes. They told me, ‘Don’t worry about that, it’s not important right now!’ ”
The lockdown lasted nearly an hour. The gun turned out to be a wooden replica that a student had used in an ROTC morning drill. When the student, whose identity was not being released, realized that he had been mistaken for a threat, he turned himself in to campus police, said Greg Saks, a university vice president.
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seema.mehta@latimes.com
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david.mckibben@latimes.com
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