Sadly, threats are so common these days. Far more than people realize, unless you work in a school environment. Same thing happens every time. A threat comes into the school, the district, etc., usually by social media. Sometimes it is specific schools, sometimes it’s general. The authorities do a deep dive to find the location it came from, go to the home, interview person (usually teenager) and the parents, and find out if guns are accessible. The kid will say it was a joke and the parents will say the guns (if any) are secure. The student continues going to school since there isn’t anything that can be done. Oftentimes the threat is from a completely different state or one that was changed as it spread across media and appeared more specific to a certain school. That happens a lot. Example…kid is California posts that he/she is going to shoot up their school and anonymously posts on social media. Someone in Virgina sees it, screenshots it, and posts it. Someone else then screenshots it, posts it, and adds text warning friends not to go to school. Then those friends think it was originally posted about their school in Virgina, when it really started in California. School’s hands are tied.
Was the this week’s threat really CALLED in? In my 33 years of education, we’ve never had the actual threat called in. It’s always been through and anonymous tip line or social media. Those are handled immediately and often found to not be serious. I’m going to guess the threat was a hoax that ended up completely coincidental, or the shooter and some friends decided to make the threat but the friends had no idea the shooter was really going to do it. Although there are students that we know have made threats in the past, rarely has a shooter warned the school ahead of time except for last minute social media posts. The first question doesn’t need to be how did the shooter get a gun, or what was the shooter’s mental state, but HOW DID THE SHOOTER GET IT INTO SCHOOL AND HOW CAN WE STOP IT.