The Welland Tribune

Student charged over threatenin­g graffiti at school

Female under 18 at Cambridge school arrested on Tuesday, police say

- DANIELA GERMANO

CAMBRIDGE — Police have charged a high school student as they investigat­e several cases of graffiti threatenin­g shootings at schools.

Waterloo Regional Police spokespers­on Cherri Greeno said the student was charged in connection with a message at a school in Cambridge — the sixth school in the area to be hit with graffiti threatenin­g violence since mid March.

The female student at the Cambridge school was arrested Tuesday and charged with mischief under $5,000 and uttering threats to cause bodily harm or death, Greeno said.

Police are not providing the age of the student but say she is under 18.

“(The message) was spraypaint­ed on the side of a storage unit at the school and said ‘school shooting April 6th,’” Greeno said.

“All the other schools had similar messages, most of them were written in bathroom stalls, around harm being done at a school in terms of a shooting, all given different dates.”

The first incident of graffiti threatenin­g violence took place at a high school in Kitchener on March 21, Greeno said.

That message was found on a bathroom stall and read “school shooting March 28th, not a joke, watch out,” she said.

Since then, five other schools in the region have been hit with alleged “copycat” incidents, which police say are all still under investigat­ion.

“Whatever the intention behind these messages are, whether

‘‘ These types of situations will be fully investigat­ed and disciplina­ry action will be taken as appropriat­e. Consequenc­es ... could include suspension and or expulsion.

SCHOOL BOARD STATEMENT

it’s considered a joke at the time, it certainly isn’t considered a joke to the students that share the school with these people ... as well, it’s a significan­t drain on police resources,” Greeno said.

“We have had officers respond to each incident, working with the school board to a ensure a safety plan was put into place for students and staff.”

The Waterloo Region District School Board, which the Cambridge school is a part of, said the threats have caused “considerab­le disruption and worry for our students, staff and parent community.”

“We will work to ensure that those responsibl­e for these threats know there are significan­t consequenc­es to these choices and actions,” the school board said in a statement issued Wednesday.

“These types of situations will be fully investigat­ed and disciplina­ry action will be taken as appropriat­e. Consequenc­es, on the part of the school board, could include suspension and or expulsion.”

The Cambridge student’s arrest comes about two weeks after Ontario Provincial Police arrested five tweens and teens, charging them with threatenin­g schools on social media.

Officials said at the time that they have seen a recent “spike” in online threats following a Florida school shooting in February in which 14 students and three teachers were killed.

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