Days after posting mugshot of a boy accused of school threat, sheriff
puts video of 2 teens online
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[September 19, 2024]
By KATE PAYNE
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) — Around the country, communities are being
battered by a wave of school shooting threats, sparking emergency
notifications, urgent group chats and heightened fears among parents
that their child’s school could be the next Parkland or Sandy Hook or
Uvalde — or any other town hit by mass shootings.
On Florida's Atlantic coast, Sheriff Mike Chitwood of Volusia County
said he got some of these same notifications after he walked his
grandchildren to school this week.
“It just stuck with me because my cell phone was going off telling me
about the other threats. Thinking to myself, how many parents in this
country have done just what I just did,” Chitwood said, “and they never,
ever, ever get to hold their loved one again.”
Fed up with school shooting threats in his community, Chitwood pledged
to publicly identify students accused of making such threats.
On Monday, he posted the name and mugshot of an 11-year-old boy arrested
for allegedly threatening to carry out a shooting at a middle school in
his county. The decision swiftly drew praise and criticism amid the
ongoing national debate over what it would take to stem the gun violence
plaguing the nation. On Wednesday evening he released another video
online showing two more young people, identified as 16- and
17-year-olds, in handcuffs and being led to jail over what he called
another school threat.
The initial video posted by Chitwood online showed what an arrest report
described as “various airsoft style rifles and pistols, magazines, fake
ammunition ... and several knives and swords” that investigators say the
11-year-old boy gathered. The footage later cuts to an officer leading
the handcuffed boy from a squad car before he's locked into an empty
cell. The boy’s face is frequently visible in the video, which already
has gained hundreds of thousands of social media views.
Then on Wednesday, Chitwood was at it again, posting a message online:
“Two more students are in custody following a school shooting threat”
and adding of the teens, "We will introduce you to these two in the very
near future.”
Hours later the sheriff posted a Facebook video showing two teens being
led in handcuffs from a law enforcement van into separate empty cells.
He is heard saying in the post: “Go talk to the families who have lost a
loved one in a school shooting. These little knuckleheads think it’s
funny? Go talk to those parents and see how funny this is.”
The AP generally does not identify anyone under 18 accused of a crime or
transmit images that would reveal their identity.
Chitwood this week told The Associated Press he doesn't know if publicly
shaming accused juveniles will be effective. But he had to act to get
through to students and their parents.
Since the school year started a few weeks ago in Volusia County,
Chitwood said, his office has reported more than 280 school threats
compared to 352 in all of last year.
"Something has to be done," Chitwood said. “Where are the parents?”
Under Florida law, juvenile court records are generally confidential and
exempt from public release — unless the child is charged with a felony,
as in this case.
Chitwood has a reputation of being a tough-talking figure and maintains
he is within his rights to identify such young people.
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“I’m not worried about the 2% that might get handcuffed that somebody
might get offended about," Chitwood said. "I’m worried about the other
98% that are trying to go to school and live their normal lives not in
fear to get an education.”
Daniel Mears, a criminology professor at Florida State University who
researches school shootings, said the sheriff’s actions are contrary to
the spirit of the juvenile justice system.
“Juvenile records were supposed to be confidential for a reason. The
idea was that kids would have a second shot in life,” Mears said.
Still, Mears said there have long been exceptions for particularly
heinous crimes, noting school threats are treated differently.
"School shootings are just really unbelievably scary and concerning to
people," he said.
Among those applauding the sheriff’s actions is Max Schachter, whose son
Alex was murdered along with 16 others in a 2018 mass shooting at
Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida.
“We had a culture of complacency that led to the Parkland school
shooting. And we can't be complacent anymore,” Schachter told AP. “We
should be holding the individuals that perpetrate these threats and
become mass shooters to the highest extent of the law. And ultimately we
should be holding their parents responsible."
Chitwood has said he's investigating whether parents of kids who make
threats can be held financially or criminally liable.
The first parents convicted in a U.S. mass school shooting — Jennifer
and James Crumbley — were sentenced in April to at least 10 years in
prison as a Michigan judge lamented missed opportunities that could have
prevented their teenage son Ethan from possessing a gun and killing four
students in 2021. The parents were convicted of involuntary manslaughter
earlier in the year.
In Winder, Georgia, prosecutors have filed charges against the father of
a 14-year-old boy accused of killing two students and two teachers in a
recent high school shooting.
Keri Rodrigues, president of the education advocacy group National
Parents Union, said what's needed is gun control — and sufficient
psychological support for children in crisis. Surveys show American
youth are in the throes of an unprecedented mental health crisis.
“I think parents across the country are struggling with what to do with
kids,” Rodrigues said. “It’s so difficult because we don’t have enough
social workers. We don’t have enough school psychiatrists."
Kathleen Miksits is the mother of two middle schoolers in Volusia
County. She believes students and parents need to understand the toll
these threats take on their community. Miksits kept her kids home one
day this week after students at their school was targeted by a threat.
Still, she struggles with the thought that this 11-year-old boy may
never live this down.
“Kids say things that they don’t mean. Or they don’t understand what
they’re saying,” she said. “But on the other hand, this is an extremely
serious matter and we keep having kids die.”
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