Ottawa Citizen

Teen charged after lockdown at Lady Evelyn School

- ELIZABETH PAYNE

A 15-year-old has been charged with possession of a weapon, carrying a concealed weapon, uttering threats and breach of probation after Lady Evelyn School in Ottawa was placed in secure school safety mode Friday.

At about 1 p.m. Friday, officers responded to a call about a disturbanc­e in the Echo Drive and Main Street area, the Ottawa Police Service said Monday. Police, who had been told that an individual involved in the incident had a knife, chased a suspect on foot through a schoolyard and quickly made an arrest.

In a note to families of students at the school soon after the incident, principal Kim Rae-anne Esdaile said Ottawa police had asked school officials to go into secure school mode around 1:30 p.m. “as a precaution.” Access to the school was restricted, hallways were cleared and students were kept in their classrooms for a short period of time. The restrictio­ns were loosened shortly after and lifted 15 minutes later, she said.

“I should note that during the police operations a suspect fled through the back of the schoolyard and was chased by police,” she said. Esdaile said no students were outside at the time, “but this brief incident may have been witnessed by some students.”

Esdaile said school officials spoke to some students after the incident was resolved “to reassure them that they were safe.”

In a second note to parents, Esdaile said she checked in with all students before dismissal Friday afternoon. She encouraged families to call the school on Monday “if you feel that your child would benefit from any additional support around this incident.”

The Ottawa Police Service did not immediatel­y release a statement about Friday’s incident.

Louise Elliott, who lives near the school and whose son is a student at the alternativ­e elementary school, said she was concerned about the initial lack of communicat­ion by police.

“Why was the police presence so heavy and why did they not issue a statement? They should when it disrupts the community and a school,” Elliott said. “There needs to be communicat­ion when they are in our neighbourh­oods, our kids are locked in school, and they are chasing people.”

Elliott said she was alarmed to see a police officer wearing a bulletproo­f vest standing on Evelyn Avenue near the school when parents had no informatio­n about what was going on.

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