Teen is in custody after trying to enter Wisconsin elementary school
while armed, police say
Send a link to a friend
[November 09, 2024]
By TODD RICHMOND and RICK CALLAHAN
MADISON, Wis. (AP) — A 13-year-old boy who had researched school
shootings online was arrested hours after he tried to enter a Wisconsin
elementary school with suspicious bags, police said.
Investigators believe the boy was armed, judging by videos of him
brandishing what investigators believe was a rifle and comments he made
to other students, said Patrick Patton, police chief in Kenosha, a city
on Lake Michigan between Milwaukee and Chicago.
“We narrowly missed a tragedy," Patton said at a news conference
Thursday afternoon.
The teen tried to enter Roosevelt Elementary School around 9 a.m.
Thursday with a backpack and a duffle bag, according to police. Staff
members grew suspicious and moved to question him, but he fled.
Kenosha Unified schools were placed on lockdown for the rest of the day
as police searched for the boy. They finally arrested him at his home
that afternoon.
The teen attends Mahone Middle School in Kenosha and was a former
Roosevelt Elementary student, police said, but they have not released
his name. They said in a news release Friday that he has been charged
with making terroristic threats. Kenosha County District Attorney
Michael Graveley said in an email to The Associated Press on Friday that
the boy will be prosecuted in juvenile court, where proceedings are
confidential.
It was unclear Friday whether the boy was actually armed when he tried
to enter the elementary school. Patton said investigators believe he was
carrying a firearm, but the chief has not said whether police recovered
any weapons or ammunition from him.
A search of his home netted several pellet guns that resembled real
handguns and a pellet rifle that resembled a real rifle, police said in
Friday's news release. The boy's mother told investigators he didn't
have access to any actual firearms.
The teen told detectives he went to the elementary school to sell candy
but later told a social worker he intended to scare students, police
said.
Investigators also “have information that the suspect performed multiple
internet searches related to school shootings," Patton said Thursday,
adding that the teen had shared videos and made several comments to
fellow students for weeks before Thursday.
[to top of second column]
|
The Kenosha Police Department is parked in front of Roosevelt
Elementary School on Thursday, Nov. 7, 2024 in Kenosha, Wis. (Sean
Krajacic/The Kenosha News via AP)
“This is something that had been told to people of his growing
intentions," Patton said. “We know that there is internet searches,
and all the red flags that we would look for and expect someone to
report were there.”
Police received at least one video of the student wielding what
investigators believe is a rifle, Patton said. The chief played a
video at a news conference Thursday that shows the student holding a
firearm as he appears to practice room-entry techniques, Patton
said. The chief did not specify when or where the video was filmed,
but it appears to have been filmed in a home.
“The Kenosha Police Department had reason to believe the suspect had
access to some type of firearm based on videos on social media and
other witness information,” the agency said in Friday's news
release. “The actions on scene were extremely suspicious and the
internet activity by the suspect suggested they had extensive
research history related to previous school shootings, information
on how to execute a school shooting, and specifics about the
targeted building.”
The student was taken into custody some six months after police shot
and killed an armed student outside a Wisconsin middle school
following a report of someone with a weapon. The May shooting in
Mount Horeb, outside Madison, sent children fleeing and led to an
hourslong lockdown of local schools. Prosecutors announced in August
that the officers who fatally shot the student would not face
criminal charges.
Kenosha made national headlines in August 2020 after a white police
officer shot a Black man during a domestic disturbance, leaving him
paralyzed. The shooting spurred several nights of protests. A white
Illinois teenager named Kyle Rittenhouse shot three people during
the unrest, killing two of them. A jury eventually acquitted
Rittenhouse of any wrongdoing after he argued he fired in
self-defense.
___
Callahan reported from Indianapolis.
All contents © copyright 2024 Associated Press. All rights reserved |