Los Angeles Times

Worker at Vista high school is suspected of ‘swatting’ campus

- By Caleb Lunetta Lunetta writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune. U-T staff writer Teri Figueroa contribute­d to this report.

VISTA — A staff member at a San Diego County high school was identified as a suspect after a threat was called in to the school in January, prompting a temporary lockdown, sheriff ’s officials said Thursday.

The San Diego County Sheriff’s Department said investigat­ors “developed probable cause to arrest” the 52-year-old staff member in connection with the Jan. 13 incident at Rancho Buena Vista High School in Vista.

Although the staffer was not arrested, investigat­ors forwarded the informatio­n to the district attorney’s office for potential prosecutio­n, according to a news release. The employee is scheduled to be arraigned in Superior Court on March 7. Charges, if any, will be announced at that time.

A school district official said Friday that the employee had resigned.

Vista Unified School District Supt. Matt Doyle sent a letter to parents Thursday calling the incident an alleged “swatting” — a prank in which someone makes a false report to law enforcemen­t, prompting them to send officers or deputies, including SWAT teams, to someone’s address.

Doyle said the unsubstant­iated threat was the latest in a series of incidents in recent months at Rancho Buena Vista High School. At no point were staff or students in danger, he said.

According to the Sheriff ’s Department, deputies were notified of an anonymous threat of violence made at the school just before 8:30 a.m. Jan. 13. The school was placed on “secure campus” status, meaning students and staff were kept indoors while authoritie­s searched for evidence of a threat.

A school resource deputy, station deputies and detectives swept the campus, Sgt. Alfred Gathings said in a news release. The school was later deemed safe and classes resumed.

Investigat­ors determined that the anonymous caller had made the threat using a cellphone app to disguise where they were calling from, Gathings said in the release. They located the origin of the call and determined the caller was a staff member.

“The safety of our school children is a priority for the Sheriff’s Department and we take all such threats seriously,” sheriff ’s officials said in a statement. “In recent months, the Vista Sheriff ’s Station has responded to several school threats. Multiple suspects were identified in these cases.”

Doyle called the news that a district employee was suspected of making the threat “disturbing and alarming” and that the district would support the legal consequenc­es levied against perpetrato­rs.

“This type of behavior has no place in our school district and will never be tolerated,” Doyle said.

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