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Tag: School shooting threat

  • Jury convicts man in case of emailed mass shooting threat against elementary school

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    Shoal Creek Elementary. (File photo courtesy of Shoal Creek Educational Foundation via Facebook)

    A man was convicted Tuesday of sending emailed threats to commit a mass shooting at Shoal Creek Elementary School in Carmel Mountain Ranch.

    A San Diego jury deliberated for about a day before finding Lee Lor, 40, guilty of a single felony count of making criminal threats for an email he sent in December 2023 that prompted a police response at the campus and Lor’s arrest later that day.

    Lor is slated to be sentenced next month. The criminal threats count carries a maximum possible sentence of three years in state prison.

    Prosecutors say the email was one of over 400 he sent over the course of several months stating he would commit a shooting at the school, located less than a mile from where Lor was living at the time.

    The threatening email cited in the case stated that he was going “to commit mass shootings” at the school and listed Shoal Creek’s address.

    Another email he sent stated, “I’m going to murder a bunch of children,” while another read, “Children are going to die and parents can’t do nothing about it. This will put a smile on my face.”

    None of the emails Lor wrote was sent directly to the school. Instead, Lor replied to random spam emails in his inbox with nearly identical threats against Shoal Creek. One of the emails he replied to on Dec. 1 landed in the spam folder of a woman in Beverly Hills, who alerted police.

    Lor’s defense attorney, Deputy Public Defender Lucas Hirsty, argued his client shouldn’t be found guilty because the email was not sent directly to the school and did not specifically threaten its principal, Harmeena Omoto, who is listed in a criminal complaint as the victim in the case.

    Omoto testified last week that she felt “shock, disbelief, (and) fear” upon learning of the threat, which she said prompted campus officials to raise the fences surrounding its playground areas. She also said she now stands at the school’s front gates during on-campus events that are open to the public and personally checks each person attending the events to see if they have any connection with the school.

    Hirsty argued that because the email lacked any reference to Omoto, Lor could not be found guilty under the law of threatening her. A judge dismissed the criminal case against Lor last year, saying that it requires a threat to specifically target an individual, but prosecutors later refiled the criminal threats count.

    The defense attorney also argued that Lor’s practice of replying to spam emails was an outlet for his personal struggles and that he didn’t intend to threaten anyone or believe his messages were even being read.

    Deputy District Attorney Savanah Howe said Lor was aware his messages would be taken seriously because six months before sending the email regarding Shoal Creek, Lor sent similar emails claiming a shooting was imminent at his workplace, which led officers to respond to Lor’s workplace.

    Lor was not arrested at the time for the workplace-related emails, but the prosecutor said, “He knew this course of action, this conduct, would lead to the result that it did.”

    She also argued that threats made to the school in turn threaten its occupants, and in particular, its principal.

    “A threat to a group of human beings is necessarily a threat to their leader,” the prosecutor told jurors during closing arguments on Monday. “The defendant should not get a free pass just because he didn’t put Principal Omoto’s name in the threat.”

    Though the prosecution wasn’t required to show Lor had any intention of carrying out the shooting, prosecutors said that after his arrest, Lor told officers he periodically thought about committing the shooting and how he would do it, but never could bring himself to go through with it.

    Hirsty told the jury there was no law outlining that threats to a group represent threats to its leader.

    “That’s an attempt for the government to minimize their burden because they know they don’t have the evidence to satisfy this element (of the penal code),” he said.

    The case has led to a new law, that in an early form was sponsored by Assemblymember Darshana Patel, D-San Diego, San Diego District Attorney Summer Stephan, among others.

    The bill was merged with a Senate bill, which Gov. Gavin Newsom signed Oct. 11. The new law clarifies that threats to schools, universities, places of worship, medical facilities and more are criminal even if a specific person isn’t identified as the target. Lor named only the school in his threatening emails.

    Patel said her proposal was prompted by the Shoal Creek threats.

    Times of San Diego contributed to this report.


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  • ‘He’s dangerous:’ Suspect in Wyoming school shooting threat sexually assaulted minor 2 years prior

    ‘He’s dangerous:’ Suspect in Wyoming school shooting threat sexually assaulted minor 2 years prior

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    JOHNSTOWN, Colo. — An 18-year-old Cheyenne, Wyoming, high school student arrested for allegedly threatening to shoot up his school could face additional legal troubles since he was on probation for a sex crime committed in Colorado when he was 15.

    The student, Tyler Bathke, was convicted of sexually assaulting a 4-year-old girl in Johnstown in November 2022. The assault took place on New Year’s Day, and the victim was the daughter of Bathke’s neighbors, Danielle and Cody Lewark. The teen was placed on two years probation, which he was still serving when he was arrested on a felony charge of making terrorist threats.

    CHEYENNE HIGH SCHOOL INCIDENT

    According to the Cheyenne Police Department, the incident occurred at East High School in Cheyenne on Thursday, September 26, around 1 p.m. A school resource officer received a report of a male student carrying a gun in his waistband and making “concerning statements to other students – one of which indicated that a school shooting was going to occur.”

    When officers arrived, they determined there wasn’t a gun, but they found Bathke and verified “that threatening statements were made.” The Cheyenne Police Department filed for an arrest warrant on Friday, September 27. Bathke turned himself in on Tuesday.

    Cheyenne Police Chief Mark Francisco issued the following statement in a press release:

    “School threats carry very real consequences. This incident caused unnecessary fear, panic, and disruption in our community and placed a burden on school and police resources. We will always take violent threats seriously and will continue to work closely with our partners in education.”

    Bathke’s bond was set at $2,000 at his initial court appearance in Cheyenne. His preliminary hearing is scheduled for Friday, October 11.

    2022 CONVICTION

    “He traumatized everybody, and now he’s able to traumatize Cheyenne,” said Danielle Lewark.

    The Weld County mother once considered the Bathke family close friends. The families would take vacations together, and Bathke became best friends with Lewark’s son.

    Lewark’s daughter was assaulted when she went downstairs to get her pajamas. Lewark started to wonder where her daughter went after she disappeared for around 11 minutes. When the victim finally appeared, she told her parents that “it hurts when Tyler takes photos.”

    Lewark called for her husband to kick Bathke out of the house. After examining her daughter, Lewark said she found bruises and cuts on her hips, mouth, and private area. According to Lewark’s daughter, Bathke molested and groomed her throughout the evening and told her, “Trust me, best buddies get to do this.”

    Jaimie Williams-Dawson

    Danielle and Cody Lewark’s 4-year-old daughter was sexually assaulted by Tyler Bathke in 2022.

    “She trusted him,” said Lewark. “It doesn’t matter that he was 15. It wouldn’t matter if he was 40. The same thing happened. My daughter had a grown man on top of her, and he forced her to do things she did not want to do, and he hurt her.”

    Bathke’s sexual exploitation charges were dismissed, but the Lewarks insisted that the sexual assault charge should remain.

    The court issued restraining orders against Bathke and his father. However, Bathke’s order had an exception, allowing the teen to still live in his Johnstown home right across the street from the Lewarks. Arrest records show that Bathke’s father violated the protection order in 2022. Additionally, the Lewarks claim that he took photos of their daughter, harassed them, and threw objects at their home.

    “They never showed any remorse, just complete denial,” said Lewark.

    Five months later, the Bathke family moved to Cheyenne.

    WHAT’S NEXT?

    Just hours before the Lewarks spoke to Denver7, they received an email from the Colorado Probation Department’s Victim Services. The email said that a motion to revoke Bathke’s probation had been filed, and “a warrant was issued,” which would bring him back to Weld County.

    We contacted the Weld County District Attorney’s office to see if Bathke’s probation revocation meant he could face jail time, but they declined to comment because “it’s referring to a juvenile case.”

    “Accountability in today’s society is something that is severely lacking,” said Cody Lewark. “The first crime was heinous and horrible in its own right. Now, the second crime, he’s threatening to shoot an entire school!”

    The victim’s parents said they hoped to see a few legal changes that could prevent future cases of abuse:

    • They argued that a restraining order shouldn’t have an exception allowing Bathke to live close to the victim.
    • They argued that Bathke shouldn’t be allowed to attend a public school.
    • They argued that Bathke’s parents shouldn’t have overseen his probation.

    “I believe he needs treatment,” said Lewark. “Away from society until he can have true treatment that can help, support and hopefully get him on the right path.”

    Suspect in Cheyenne East High shooting threat sexually assaulted minor two years prior

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