Officials on alert after campus bomb threat
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Deepa Bharath
COSTA MESA -- A bomb threat scribbled on the wall inside a Costa Mesa
High School girls restroom has prompted Newport-Mesa school officials to
beef up security on the campus to deal with the threat -- reportedly set
for Friday the 13th.Two female students who walked into the restroom
Tuesday morning saw the threat on the wall and reported it to the
school’s security officers, said Assistant Principal Steve Pavich.
“It basically said that a bomb would go off here on Friday the 13th,”
he said Wednesday.
The school district has hired a private security agency to handle the
situation, said Pavich. Security officers from the agency and police
officers will comb the campus and check lockers beginning Thursday night
and will stay on through the school day Friday, he said.
Anxious parents and curious students have already approached
counselors and school officials inquiring about the incident, said
Pavich.
“We expect Friday will be a light day attendance-wise,” he said. “The
word gets around even in a school with 1,850 kids.”
The local Police Department and the Orange County Sheriff’s Department
have been notified about the threat, said Costa Mesa Police Lt. Dale
Birney.
“The sheriff’s bomb squad has made it abundantly clear that they will
be available to the school [Thursday] and Friday,” he said.
The bomb squad would likely help school officials by bringing in
bomb-sniffing dogs.
Costa Mesa Police has also offered to help the school, said Birney.
“We’ll do whatever the school wants us to do,” he said.
Birney added that while it is important for the school to take
security measures, the heightened attention could lead to future copycat
threats.
“Now they know they are going to get a reaction if they do something
like this,” he said.
The school, however, “is taking this threat very seriously,” said
Pavich.
“We’re going to try and keep only one entrance open so we can control
who comes in or goes out,” he said.
Such unfortunate incidents take away a lot of valuable time from
school officials, Pavich said.
“We lose time that we can spend planning curriculum and making things
better,” he said. “It’s really sad.”
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