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Entries in threat (5)

Sunday
21Feb2010

MySpace threats keep man away from schools

Vancouver Sun

A 24-year-old Duncan, BC (not AD) man is being barred from a school for threatening to shoot up a local school in a MySpace conversation.

The woman he was conversing with from Sarnia, Ontario contacted her local police who in turn contacted the RCMP who as always found their man.

Barring him is like the restraining order that never keeps the domestic abuser away.

Tags: , , ,

Sunday
29Nov2009

UK YouTube rappers arrested

This is not a repeat...

Two jailed for YouTube song threat:

Two alleged rappers from the UK, Ishmael McLean, 22, and Rowan Simon, 18, were found guilty of trying to pervert the course of justice by posting a rap video on YouTube threatening the witnesses of a murder. In US terms they were found guilty of witness intimidation.

The rap entitled "Wrong Team" threatened bthe witnesses of the murder of 24-year-old Jason Johnson last year.

They claimed it was just a rap but thankfully the courts didn't buy it.

McLean was jailed for five years on Friday, including a year for having three bullets hidden in a shoebox, while Simon was imprisoned for two-and-a-half years.

I'm pretty sure that in the UK it works the same as the US that threats are not a protected form of speech.

Friday
27Nov2009

YouTube rappers arrested

YouTube rappers charged with threatening police, New Bedford probation officer:

Police in New Bedford, Mass. arrested 24-year-old Matthew Rufino and 28-year-old Jason Foley for posting their rap on YouTube that threatened local police and a probation officer which I'm going to assume was one of theirs.

The four-minute video was posted to YouTube on Nov. 1 and has been watched about 2,000 times. Called “WATCH 4 ME,” it includes members of the rap group bragging about making America’s Most Wanted, images of smashed police cars, warnings of violence against police and derogatory statements made about police. Background noises include sirens and gunshots.

Cry free speech all you want but public threats aren't a protected form of speech.

Wednesday
08Mar2006

Xanga Blog Threat Investigated

Police will look into threat on teacher:

Police in Lenexa, Kansas are investigating a threat made against a Trailridge Middle School teacher...

Cpl. Brad Martens, Trailridge's school resource officer, said that in a posting on the online journal site Xanga.com a pupil threatened to kill a teacher over a grade. The police report filed in the incident said the threat was posted Jan. 17. It is not known when the posting was discovered, but the teacher notified Martens on Feb. 28.

Apparently parents of Trailridge Middle School students have the "Not My Kid" syndrome...

Trailridge parents who attended a special school board meeting Monday night complained that the school was overreacting to Web log entries that should not be taken literally. The meeting was a community forum where parents and patrons could ask questions about any topic.

"We all say things out of frustration, irritation and exasperation that we do not mean literally, and our children are no different, Joanne McNair, who has a child at the school, said at the meeting. "I understand that we live in a world where we must be aware that some people are disturbed and can be dangerous. But that's not enough of a reason to try to read dangerous motives into innocent, if perhaps not well-chosen, words."

When someone posts online that they are going to kill a teacher over a grade in these times is not "innocent, not well chosen words". How many people thought the writings of Eric Harris and Jeff Weise were just the ramblings of angst ridden teens before they killed their victims?

Apparently lax parenting is abundant in Lenexa...

Trailridge parent Todd Parker questioned the amount of resources the district was devoting to monitoring Xanga.

Kaplan said the district does not have staff dedicated to monitoring online journals. In fact, she said, the three most popular sites are blocked from school computers and teachers cannot access them from work.

So the school is doing their job by blocking access to sites like Xanga and MySpace. It's up to the parents to know what their children are posting online.

Superintendent Marjorie Kaplan agrees...

Kaplam said that parents need to monitor their children's Internet activities.

"The message that you need to send to your child is that threatening is wrong," Kaplan said. "And there is a possibility of the school district taking action if they find out about it. That would be the best safeguard and then the school wouldn't have to overreact."

Wow, common sense from a school administrator. Will wonders never cease? But she makes a valid point. It's not up to the school to monitor your kids' online activity after school hours. It's yours as a parent. Stop trying to be your kids' friend all the time and start being their parent. If you don't know how to check their online activities learn. If you don't have the time then make time. The safety of your children and countless other children depend on it.

As always it was your pleasure.

Cross posted at TheTrenchcoat Chronicles.

Thursday
02Mar2006

20 students suspended over MySpace

California middle-schoolers suspended for viewing MySpace posting with alleged threat:

COSTA MESA – Twenty middle-schoolers were suspended for two days after viewing a boy's posting on the MySpace.com Web site that contained an alleged threat, school officials said.

Police are investigating the boy's comments about his classmate as a possible hate crime, and the district is trying to expel the boy from TeWinkle Middle School.

According to three parents of the suspended students, the invitation to join the boy's MySpace group gave no indication of the alleged threat. They said the MySpace social group name's was “I hate (girl's name)” and included an expletive and an anti-Semitic reference.

A later message to group members directed them to a nondescript folder, which included a posting that allegedly asked: “Who here in the (group name) wants to take a shotgun and blast her in the head over a thousand times?”

Here's my favorite part...

Metz said the students' suspensions in mid-Febuary were appropriate because the incident involved student safety. Some parents however questioned whether the school overstepped its bounds by disciplining students for actions that occurred on personal computers, at home and after school hours.

Emphasis mine.

Well maybe if you were actually paying attention to what your kids were doing online the school wouldn't have to step in and take action.

Dumbasses.