Arrest made after online post threatening violence at multiple Florida schools


The sheriff’s office said in its Saturday statement that statements like the once made in this case are crimes under Florida law. 'Whether it is said aloud, written in text or posted on social media, an individual can be charged with a felony for written threats to kill, do bodily injury, or conduct a mass shooting.' — Photo by Sunil Ray on Unsplash

A 14-year-old girl was arrested after posting threats of violence at several Broward County, Florida, schools, officials said last Sunday.

The Broward School District said in a statement that the “social media threat posted this weekend against specific Broward County Public Schools has been neutralised,” adding that “There is no safety concern to any of our campuses.”

The threat was made last Saturday afternoon on social media. The student was arrested last Saturday evening for making written threats to kill or conduct a mass shooting, the Broward Sheriff’s Office said in a statement.

BSO said the Lauderdale Lakes girl posted several threats on Instagram, including a list of schools across the county that would be targeted and additional threats of a school shooting or other acts of violence.

Several schools in different cities were listed by name. WSVN showed images of the threatening posts, which listed 11 elementary, middle and high schools and listed a specific time on Monday. One image broadcast by WSVN showed a hand holding a gun.

Several people saw the threats and reported them to authorities via Fortify Florida, an app for reporting potentially dangerous activity, School Board member Debbi Hixon said in a telephone interview. She said the threat was reported to her and she reported it as well.

The Sheriff’s Office was immediately notified and detectives from its Threat Management Unit and Real Time Crime Center, alongside police from Fort Lauderdale, Plantation, the school district, began investigating the threats.

The girl was taken to the Juvenile Assessment Center, BSO said. She faces charges of making written threats to kill/conduct a mass shooting; threat to throw, project, place or discharge any destructive device; and unlawful use of a two-way communication device.

Hixon said all such threats need to be taken seriously. “We have to investigate them and find them and have to have severe consequences so they understand this is not a joke.”

The sheriff’s office said in its Saturday statement that statements like the once made in this case are crimes under Florida law. “Whether it is said aloud, written in text or posted on social media, an individual can be charged with a felony for written threats to kill, do bodily injury, or conduct a mass shooting.”

Hixon said the system worked as it should in this case, but said the number of threats of violence are a serious problem. “Unfortunately it is part of the world we live in right now,” she said.

“Frustrating is not even the right word. It’s disheartening. It’s maddening. It’s disgusting that our students, our staff, our community in general have to live with this anxiety on this constant basis,” Hixon said. “How will you ever feel safe and comfortable in your school if they (threats) are made every day?”

On Friday, the day before the threat to the group of schools, another threat was directed at another school, she said.

Hixon, who was a career educator, is the widow of Chris Hixon, who was among the 17 people killed in the Feb 14, 2018, massacre at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, where he was athletic director. After his murder, she ran for and was elected to the School Board.

The threats take a toll. “I think for me anyway, there’s still that little bit of anxiety in the back of your head. I’m sure some students and parents are going to feel that way sending their students to that list of schools that were there.”

Hixon said she would like to see greater efforts toward reducing the situations that drive some people to make threats. “We need to do a better job of identifying when students get to that point,” she said, adding that students need to be given more training and tools on how not to allow bullying and harassment to overcome their lives so much that they feel moved to make threats.

Those who are bullied and harassed need to get better tools to be able to say, “‘I should not be giving you all of my power because you say something mean.’ And that’s really what needs to change.”

“How could we do a better job as a society, as a School Board, in identifying those situations so that we can resolve it before it comes to what’s landed in our laps now? I don’t even know if that’s possible, but it’s 100% what I’ve been thinking the last couple of days,” Hixon said.

“We have to do something different,” she said. “We’re in a crisis, and it’s becoming normalised. Students are like ‘Oh yeah, another threat.’ One day it’s not just going to be an idle threat as we already know.”

Hixon said students aren’t the only ones who can become overwhelmed by criticism and harassment. “Adults get wrapped into that as well,” she said.

“It’s more than a Broward County issue. It’s a national society issue. But we have to start somewhere,” she said. – South Florida Sun-Sentinel/Tribune News Service

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