Immediately, Leon’s heart sank as images of worst-case scenarios flooded her mind. She might lose one of her kids today, she told herself.
“I jumped up in a panic and instantly threw up,” Leon told CNN. “I believed it and feared for my children’s lives. I called them, and when they didn’t answer the first time, I started crying.”
Leon’s son, 14, and daughter, 16, both attend Watson Chapel High School, which was put on lockdown immediately after the school received news of a possible active shooter on campus — another in a series of reported threats at US schools this week.
Leon soon received a text from her son, saying, “Mama please come get me, they say three people got shot in the bathroom and I’m scared.”
After an agonizing 30 minutes of waiting at the school, Leon — along with hundreds of other panicked teachers, students and parents — discovered that it was a false alarm.
False reports like this are a growing problem in the United States, and have even caught the attention of the FBI.
“When I found out it was because of a prank text I was extremely upset,” Leon said. “It was not a game for us and it was not a game for our children, who were in that building terrified that they were going to be killed.”
False reports are ‘putting people in danger’
As students throughout the district were being released to parents, many still in tears, a similar panic was unfolding elsewhere.
At least two other US school districts had hoax calls on Friday, following a number of false reports claiming active shooters earlier this week.
Authorities are taking note of its frequency, and warning the public of its dangers.
“The FBI takes swatting very seriously because it puts innocent people at risk.”
“It’s not a joke and it’s not harmless,” CNN chief law enforcement and intelligence analyst John Miller said. “Out of all the types of swatting, this creates the most danger. When police show up for what they think is an active shooter, they come in strong, heavy, armed, and fast. It raises the level of hazard for everyone involved and is putting people in danger.”
False reports also exhaust limited police resources, which are better served focusing on real crimes, Miller said.
“It puts a lot of police resources towards an incident that’s not really unfolding, because it creates this sense of severe and urgent danger that could result in many fatalities,” he said. “It also takes police resources away from incidents that really are happening. Low priority calls can be quite serious and you’re delaying response times and not allowing help to get to people who really need it.”
While investigations into hoax calls like the ones that occurred Friday are “extremely, extremely time consuming and challenging” due to callers hiding behind layers of concealment, encrypted platforms and the dark web, Miller said, it’s critical for local police to take them seriously.
“It’s still worth it to pursue these cases because when they end in arrests, it really knocks out the idea it can be done without consequence,” he added.
‘You can’t imagine the stress and hurt you put on families’
Nothing was funny about the parents who stood outside Watson Chapel High School on Friday crying out their children’s names, Leon said.
It wasn’t funny inside the school either, where Jacorrian Spears said students and staff were texting friends and family to say “I love you” one last time.
Spears, an AP US history teacher, recalls the moment his fourth period class was interrupted by the school secretary screaming into the intercom, “code black, code black, code black,” with “distress in her voice.”
Immediately, Spears locked his classroom door and blockaded the room with a bookshelf before taking cover with frightened students. Nearly an hour later, everyone was released.
From his window, Spears saw a stream of parents running to unite with their children.
“Teachers were trying to piece together what happened and students were just ready to go home,” Spears said. “When we found out it was a prank, I guess I was kind of relieved but it still was terrible.”
“The students said they had flashbacks of the shooting that happened to them in junior high,” Spears said. “Those kids are now 11th graders and they still wear RIP hoodies and shirts of their classmate. They’ve told me before how it still kind of haunts them and today didn’t make it any better. “
The 15-year-old boy who died in the 2021 shooting was Leon’s daughter’s best friend. “She relives that memory everyday,” Leon said. “Today brought everything back.”
Leon is now focused on helping her children move past yet another traumatizing event.
“It’s very stressful being a parent today,” Leon said. “I’m afraid every time they walk out the door. Even before today, I stressed about my children going to school.”
“In this day and time, things like this really happen,” she added. “You can’t imagine the stress and hurt you put on families when you do things like this. This is something most parents worry about everyday when we send our children to school. It needs to stop.”
CNN’s Jamiel Lynch, Melissa Alonso, Josh Campbell and Sara Sidner contributed to this report.
Source : CNN