Tag Archive: columbine


Student charged in Utah school bomb plot (AP)

ROY, Utah – The two teens had a detailed plot, blueprints of the school and security systems, but no explosives. They had hours of flight simulator training on a home computer and a plan to flee the country, but no plane.

Still, the police chief in this small Utah town said, the plot was real.

“It wasn’t like they were hanging out playing video games,” Roy Police Chief Gregory Whinham said Friday. “They put a lot of effort into it.”

Dallin Morgan, 18, and a 16-year-old friend were arrested Wednesday at Roy High School, about 30 miles north of Salt Lake City, after a fellow student reported that she received ominous text messages from one of the suspects.

“If I tell you one day not to go to school, make damn sure you and your brother are not there,” one message read, according to court records. “We ain’t gonna crash it, we’re just gonna kill and fly our way to a country that won’t send us back to the U.S.,” read another message.

While police don’t have a motive, one text message noted they sought “revenge on the world.”

The suspects say they were inspired by the deadly 1999 Columbine High School shootings in Littleton, Colo., and the younger suspect even visited the school last month to interview the principal about the shootings and security measures.

However, one suspect told authorities it was offensive to be compared to the Columbine shooters because “those killers only completed 1 percent of their plan,” according to a probable cause statement.

The teens had so studied their own school’s security system that they knew how to avoid being seen on the facility’s surveillance cameras, authorities said.

Whinham said the “very smart kids” had spent at least hundreds of dollars on flight simulator programs, books and manuals, studying them in anticipation of carrying out their plan to bomb an assembly at the 1,500-student high school.

While authorities said the suspects believed they could pull it off, experts said, it would have been a long shot.

Royal Eccles, manager at the Ogden-Hinckley Airport, about a mile from the school, said it would have been nearly impossible for the students to steal a plane or get the knowledge to fly one using flight simulator programs.

“It’s highly improbable,” Eccles said. “That’s how naive these kids are.”

Whinham said authorities searched two homes and two cars and found no explosives, but added that police continue to search other locations. The chief said it appeared that “a key component of their plan was not developed.”

“I wouldn’t want to say that they don’t have it or that they weren’t ready for it,” he said. “I’m just saying that we haven’t found anything that says they were ready for it yet.”

Whinham said it appeared the suspects, who have no criminal history, also had prepared alternate attack plans, but he declined to elaborate. He also declined to say whether any firearms were found during their searches.

“Most houses have firearms in them,” he said. “This is the state of Utah.”

While authorities have said they have not found any explosives, they charged Morgan on Friday with possession of a weapon of mass destruction.

The basis for the charge wasn’t immediately clear, though one of the elements of that offense is conspiracy to use a weapon, not necessarily possessing one. Prosecutors say they are considering additional charges.

Morgan has been released on bond, pending a court hearing Wednesday. The 16-year-old, whom The Associated Press isn’t naming because he’s a minor, remained held pending further court hearings.

Whinham said he knew both suspects personally, given the small size of the suburban Utah town of roughly 36,000 people. He said he had met with both of the suspects’ parents and they were “devastated.”

The 16-year-old suspect’s father declined comment Friday, and no one answered the door at Morgan’s home.

The plot “was months in planning,” said Whinham, who also noted Morgan told investigators the 16-year-old had previously made a pipe bomb using gun powder and rocket fuel.

In Colorado, Columbine Principal Frank DeAngelis confirmed Friday he met with the 16-year-old suspect on Dec. 12 after the teenager told him he was doing a story for his school newspaper on the shootings.

DeAngelis said he frequently gets requests from students doing research on the shootings, and the request from this one wasn’t unusual.

“He asked the same questions I get from many callers and visitors asking about the shooting,” DeAngelis said. He said the student wanted details about the shooting, the aftermath and the steps taken since then to protect the school.

Police said the student told them Roy school officials would not allow him to write the story.

DeAngelis said he was shocked when he got a call from Utah police on Wednesday asking if he had met with the youth. He said the interview raised no red flags but that he would do things differently with future requests.

“This was definitely a wake-up call. This is the first time this has happened,” DeAngelis said.

Police credit the suspects’ schoolmate with helping foil their plan, though Whinham said the school didn’t have any assemblies set, and the suspects revealed no specific dates to pull off the attack.

Sophomore Bailey Gerhardt told The Salt Lake Tribune she received alarming text messages from one of the suspects and alerted school administrators.

“I get the feeling you know what I’m planning,” read one of the messages, according to court records. “Explosives, airport, airplane.”

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Associated Press writer Steven K. Paulson in Denver contributed to this report.

Student charged in Utah school bomb plot
(AP)

Jurors deliberate in Colo. school shooting trial (AP)

GOLDEN, Colo. – Jurors in the trial of a man charged with wounding two students outside a Colorado middle school have started their deliberations.

Closing arguments in the trial of Bruco (BROO’-so) Strong Eagle Eastwood were Friday in Golden. KUSA-TV in Denver reports (http://bit.ly/pEHPG5) jurors are set to resume deliberations Tuesday.

Eastwood has pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity to 15 charges, including attempted first-degree murder, in the shooting at Deer Creek Middle School last year. The school is just miles from Columbine High School, the site of one of the nation’s deadliest school shootings.

Eastwood’s lawyer had shown jurors portions of a rambling journal in which Eastwood referred to mutants or transformers taking over his body, but prosecutors said Eastwood knew the difference between right and wrong.

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Information from: KUSA-TV, http://www.9news.com

Jurors deliberate in Colo. school shooting trial
(AP)

Lawyer: Colo. school shooting suspect mentally ill (AP)

DENVER – An attorney for a man charged with shooting two Colorado eighth graders at a middle school that’s just miles from the site of one of the nation’s deadliest school shootings told jurors Tuesday her client has struggled with imaginary voices for years.

Defense lawyer Thea Reiff said Bruco (BROO’-so) Strong Eagle Eastwood had written in his notebook before last year’s shooting that the voices were becoming more threatening.

Eastwood has pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity to 15 charges, including attempted first-degree murder, in the shooting at Deer Creek Middle School that was reminiscent of the 1999 mass shooting at nearby Columbine High School.

During opening statements at Eastwood’s trial on Tuesday, Reiff showed jurors portions of the rambling journal in which Eastwood referred to mutants or transformers that were taking over his body.

“They want me to have nothing. Instead, they have me suffering, alive but in pain,” Eastwood noted in one entry.

The notebook included doodles of a man under attack.

Prosecutor Alexis King told the jury that Eastwood knew the difference between right and wrong when he shot the two children as they were leaving their suburban Denver school on Feb. 23, 2010. The school in Littleton is just miles from where one of the nation’s deadliest school shootings took place in 1999.

“He yelled that they were going to die,” King said. “He knew it was wrong and his behavior can’t be excused.”

Eastwood is accused of wounding Deer Creek students Reagan Webber and Matt Thieu.

Prosecutors said Tuesday that Eastwood approached a group of students and asked, “Do you like going to this school?” before shooting Webber in the arm. He then aimed at a boy who was running away. Thieu suffered a chest wound the size of a saucer plate.

Math teachers David Benke and Norm Hanne were hailed as heroes for tackling the shooter in the school parking lot and holding him until deputies arrived. After the Columbine attack, authorities and educators in Littleton were given extensive training on how to deal with school shootings and limit the number of casualties.

At an earlier hearing, investigators testified that Eastwood told them he was poor, hadn’t fit in with classmates when he attended Deer Creek in the early 1990s, and was subject to bullying and harassment.

Eastwood told investigators last year he took his backpack, cigarettes, $23 cash and his dad’s rifle, then bought ammunition at a sporting goods store. After stopping at a McDonald’s for some chicken sandwiches, he entered the school and told staffers he had attended it in 1991 or 1992, and asked if he could tour it.

He was told he would have to wait until students left. He waited in his car and watched a sheriff’s deputy who is assigned to the school drive away to another call before he sneaked up on the students and started shooting.

Eastwood’s trial is expected to last three weeks. He could face decades in prison if convicted of the charges — or an indefinite amount of time in a mental health institute if found not guilty by reason of insanity.

Lawyer: Colo. school shooting suspect mentally ill
(AP)

Panel: Strict school discipline should be scrapped (AP)

DENVER – Colorado lawmakers and police said Monday that strict disciplinary policies at schools created after the Columbine High School shootings should be scaled back or scrapped and that administrators should have more control over student punishment.

The state laws put in place after high-profile cases of youth violence have tied the hands of school administrators with zero-policy standard, said members of a panel looking at school discipline trends. In turn, the officials are left with no choice but to refer a high number of students to law enforcement for minor offenses that pose no threat to school safety, they said.

“Zero tolerance has outlived its shelf life and is often inappropriately and inconsistently applied,” John Jackson, the police chief for Greenwood Village, wrote in a memo by the panel. He suggested that officials come up with a better definition for what’s considered a “dangerous weapon” on school grounds.

The group was created by the state Legislature this year in part to determine whether policy changes were needed. In previous meetings, the panel has heard stories of an elementary school student who was arrested when he found a BB gun on a street and was seen playing with it at a school playground after classes ended. In another case, one student was suspended for bringing a wooden replica of a rifle to school.

Students have testified that they had heard of Colorado students facing criminal charges for accidentally hitting a teacher with a beanbag chair or swiping a stick of gum from a teacher’s purse.

State lawmakers on the panel say some of those strict policies were a result of the heightened alert and fear created by school violence, like the Columbine shootings, when two students killed 13 people and then themselves in 1999.

During the last decade, about 100,000 students in Colorado have been referred to police during the last decade, according to lawmakers. Panelists said that led to students being unnecessarily criminalized.

The panel will meet later this month to decide on any recommendations to propose in next year’s legislative session. The panel, which includes lawmakers, law enforcement, and community leaders, can only propose eight bills.

Kim Dvorchak, a criminal defense attorney and panel member, said school districts and school resource officers should develop guidelines to distinguish between school misconduct that can be handled by administrator and criminal offenses that should be referred to police.

She said that “absent a real and imminent threat” to students and teachers, administrators should have the power to handle the problem.

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Ivan Moreno can be reached on Twitter: http://twitter.com/IvanJournalist

Panel: Strict school discipline should be scrapped
(AP)

Police: School bomb plot aimed for mass casualties (AP)

TAMPA, Fla. – Police were already keeping an eye on 17-year-old expelled student Jared Cano when they were tipped off that he was allegedly planning to bomb his old high school when classes resumed. In his apartment, they found shrapnel, plastic tubing, timing and fuse devices that he was amassing in a plot he intended to be worse than the Columbine mass killings, police said Wednesday.

Before Tuesday’s discovery, Cano has been arrested several times, most recently accused of breaking into a house and stealing a handgun, Tampa police said. He had a court-ordered curfew and was on a police watch list. Officers checked up on him from time to time.

“We’ve been very, very familiar with him,” police Maj. John Newman said.

Besides the bomb-making materials, officers said they also found a journal with schematic drawings of rooms inside Freedom High School and statements about Cano’s intent to kill specific administrators and any students who happened to be nearby next week.

His juvenile arrests included burglary, carrying a concealed weapon, altering serial numbers on a firearm and drug possession. None had stuck. They had been either dismissed or no action had been taken, beyond putting his name on the police watch list.

The school scheme was mapped out minute-by-minute and he wanted to cause more casualties than the 1999 Columbine High School massacre, which killed 13 before the two shooters killed themselves, said Police Chief Jane Castor.

Police and the school system “were probably able to thwart a potentially catastrophic event, the likes of which the city of Tampa has not seen, and hopefully never will,” Castor said.

He also had a marijuana-growing operation, police said. On his Facebook page, he says he attends the “University of Marijuana,” where he is studying “how to grow weed.”

Principal Chris Farkas and other administrators knew Cano, too. He’d been expelled in April 2010. Farkas said Tuesday that Cano likely would have been “red-flagged” as soon as he stepped on campus and probably would not have been able to pull off his plan.

Farkas said he is accustomed to all sorts of threats at a school of 2,100 on a large campus in the northern suburbs. Still, he was spooked about what might have been.

“My first response was shock,” he said. “I wanted to see if it was a real threat.”

“Once I found out and saw the information and saw what was taken from the apartment complex, that was when the reality and the fear set in that this was a real situation,” he said.

The St. Petersburg Times reported that prosecutors at a hearing Wednesday said that when Cano was arrested he repeated his plan to detonate a bomb and cause mass casualties at Freedom, which opened in 2002 and was named to honor the victims of 9/11.

Cano tried to speak when he appeared before a judge but was quickly hushed by a public defender standing beside him.

“The plot wasn’t…” Cano said, before the public defender stopped him and told the judge that “he has no comment,” according to the Times.

Police told Farkas that Cano worked alone. Parents of every student got a recorded call informing them about Cano’s arrest, said the principal of the high-performing school built to handle the overflowing northern suburbs in an area some locals refer to as New Tampa.

Authorities did not name the administrators targeted nor would they disclose who tipped them off.

After Cano was expelled from Freedom, he attended a charter school and left voluntarily in March, according to Hillsborough County schools spokeswoman Linda Cobbe. At that point he was 16 and could have chosen to drop out. He was not registered to attend classes this upcoming school year. in April 2010

Cano faces felony charges of possessing bomb-making materials, cultivating marijuana, possession of drug paraphernalia, possessing of marijuana and threatening to throw, project, place or discharge a destructive device.

The Department of Children and Families said the agency investigated Cano’s family in 2009. A spokesman gave no other details except to say DCF found no evidence of abuse or neglect.

Police said his mother let them search the apartment in a modest complex just a few miles from the school. The Tampa Tribune reported that Cano’s great-grandfather Elliot Horning said that Cano’s mother, Michelle, was divorced from his dad and worked as a math teacher at another Tampa high school. His mother was not at the apartment Wednesday.

Cano’s Facebook page includes photos of him holding a machete and drinking from a bottle of malt liquor.

He lists two favorite quotes: “lessons not learned in blood are soon forgotten” and “dont trust anybody, cuz they all just wait for you to s— a brick of gold so they can take it.” He listed just 25 friends and no one that was out around the apartment complex seemed to know him.

On his Facebook page Tuesday morning, Cano wrote: “i jut did the dumbest thing ever!”

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Associated Press writers Christine Armario and Kelli Kennedy contributed from Miami.

Police: School bomb plot aimed for mass casualties (AP)

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