Chicago Sun-Times

Lincoln Park H.S. student threatened to shoot a teacher, but CPS declined charges, police say

- BY TOM SCHUBA, STAFF REPORTER tschuba@suntimes.com | @TomSchuba

Police were called to Lincoln Park High School after a student allegedly threatened to shoot a teacher on Wednesday, but the teen wasn’t taken into custody after the school declined to press charges hours later.

The confrontat­ion started when the teacher asked the 17-year-old student to leave the school auditorium around 9:40 a.m. because the teen wasn’t supposed to be there, according to a police report. While walking out, the student began using “strong profanity” and made the shooting threat, the report stated.

Chicago police weren’t called to the school until later, a police source said, and eventually arrived at 1:10 p.m. and took a statement from the teacher, the report shows. There were no cops at the building because Lincoln Park’s local school council voted in 2020 to permanentl­y remove school resource officers after students and alumni organized and decried cops as being ineffectiv­e and perpetuati­ng the socalled school-to-prison pipeline.

The police source said school officials chose not to pursue criminal charges and allowed the student to remain at the school after making the threat. No weapons were displayed or recovered by police, the source added.

In a letter sent to the school community after the incident Wednesday, Principal Eric Steinmille­r said an investigat­ion “confirmed that there was no safety threat.”

“Earlier today, there was a report that a verbal threat was made by a member of our school community,” he wrote, although the specific threat was not detailed. “Upon learning of the threat, we immediatel­y contacted the CPS Office of Safety and Security who in turn connected with the Chicago Police Department to initiate an investigat­ion.

“Upon completion of the investigat­ion, it was confirmed that there was no safety threat. All students and staff are safe,” added Steinmille­r, who called student safety his “top priority.”

The teacher involved in the incident declined comment. Lincoln Park administra­tors, including Steinmille­r, didn’t respond to questions from the Sun-Times.

Mary Ann Fergus, a spokeswoma­n for Chicago Public Schools, said the district doesn’t comment “on individual student incidents or matters.”

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