Baltimore Sun

LA school shooting plot said to have been foiled; 4 guns seized

- By James Queally

LOS ANGELES — Just 48 hours after a gunman slaughtere­d 17 students and teachers in Parkland, Fla., El Camino High School security officer Marino Chavez overheard a troubling threat.

A 17-year-old student with an “extensive” disciplina­ry history said he planned to “shoot up” the Whittier campus within three weeks, according to Los Angeles County Sheriff Jim McDonnell.

Within hours, investigat­ors searched the teen’s home and recovered two semi-automatic rifles, two handguns and 90 high-capacity magazines.

Speaking to reporters Wednesday, McDonnell said he was grateful his officers had a chance to head off a potential tragedy.

“As we see these incidents occur one after another, we’re all looking to say, ‘How do we stop this?’ ” McDonnell said.

The teen, who was not identified because he is a juvenile, is being held on suspicion of making criminal threats, the sheriff said. His older brother, an Army veteran, said the weapons belonged to him and has been booked on suspicion of numerous crimes including possession of an assault weapon, according to McDonnell.

Chavez said he became aware of the threat on Friday afternoon as the student was walking back from lunch. The officer immediatel­y confronted the teen- ager, who claimed he was only joking. The Sheriff’s Department was called and learned that a handgun was registered to the student’s home address, McDonnell said.

The student was angry about rules inside the classroom, Robert Jacobsen, an attorney for the NorwalkLa Mirada Unified School District, told reporters outside the school Wednesday in video posted by KCBSTV.

“The teacher has expectatio­ns for the students to engage in learning during class time and told students to keep their cellphones and their earphones off so they can learn,” Jacobsen said. “And this student wasn’t happy about that. ... At least what we understand at this time, it was simply over that.”

Law enforcemen­t officers in the region have been on high alert since 19-yearold Nikolas Cruz allegedly opened fire in the halls of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School on Valentine’s Day. Many of the dead were teenagers, some as young as 14. Teachers who tried to shield their students from the deadly gunfire were also killed.

McDonnell said that although it was not clear how serious the student was about committing violence, after the attack in Florida, investigat­ors’ “main interest was to avoid letting anything like that happen.”

“The Sheriff’s Department can only respond if they are told,” he said.

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