Sunday, April 20, 2008

April 20th is alot of things to alot of people

Side from Earth day, sun run day, National weed smoking day and apparently Hitler's birthday, 4/20 means alot of things to alot of people. The one which effected people the most seems to be the aniversary of the Columbine High Massacre. With all the shootings in the news of late, where have we come since then? Schools have become security fortresses with metal detectors and video surveillance but yet blood still flows.

A year ago, in the weeks before the anniversary of the Columbine school massacre, several East Valley schools were the scene of cops on campus, students spilling out of evacuated buildings and empty classroom seats belonging to students whose parents kept them home.

And while the media attention on the school lockdowns and their accompanying bomb scares, death lists and massacre plans seemed to die down as quickly as the anniversary of the 1999 Columbine High School massacre passed, some students accused of creating the hysteria are still contesting their criminal charges and facing stiff prison sentences.

One of them is Brent Clark, a 15-year-old former Powell Junior High School student in Mesa, charged with kidnapping, aggravated assault and terrorism. Depending on the circumstances, the terrorism count carries a penalty of 25 years to life in prison, the same as first-degree murder.

The teenager spent eight months in county jail and is expected to accept a plea deal next month that will land him in prison for at least two years and possibly up to eight, his defense attorney, David Cantor, said.

“It’s so abusive, it’s so wrong,” Cantor said. “It seems like eight months in jail is enough.”

Clark told authorities he held a knife to the throat of a fellow student on March 22, 2007, and stopped short of killing her, court records show.

The next day, he told his parents he planned to hold his school hostage and he had a backpack with a handgun, rope and duct tape inside.

Cantor said the boy didn’t deserve the terrorism charge because he was just sitting in his home with the items and there were “no steps in furtherance” of the crime.

Sally Wells, chief assistant Maricopa County attorney, spoke in general terms about the county attorney’s approach to these kind of cases and wouldn’t discuss any specific ones that are pending trial.

She said that since the massacre at the suburban Denver school on April 20, 1999 that took 15 lives, police and prosecutors have become well trained in assessing threats and use that in determining charges and seeking the appropriate outcome of a case.

“You can’t just label every teen who makes a dark or Goth drawing a threat,” Wells said.

Police and prosecutors first try to determine how credible and serious a threat is and whether a youth has the resources, intent and motivation to pull it off.

Authorities will look at the family, school and social dynamics as well, Wells said.

“It’s not by any means an exact science or check list,” she said.

In deciding whether to charge a child in adult or juvenile court, prosecutors consider the youth’s age and how far along the plan got.

While the Powell Junior High School student was in adult court, a 14-year-old girl from Fees Middle School in Tempe who threatened to recreate Columbine at her school went to juvenile court.

According to court records, the girl was charged with a misdemeanor and the case eventually dismissed.

It took almost 10 months, but a grand jury indicted five former Desert Mountain High School students in connection with a threat to shut down the Scottsdale Unified School District school last year, but they aren’t facing terrorism charges or even the charge of disrupting a school.

They were charged in adult court with burglary and criminal damage for an April 7, 2007, break-in in which chemicals used in the making of explosives was stolen from a science classroom.

Matt Hendley, 18, and Scott Evans, 19, have pleaded guilty to criminal damage, a low-level felony, according to court records, and the rest are pending trial.

Grand jury testimony of a Scottsdale detective shows that the atmosphere was charged in the week before the Columbine anniversary last year, which included the April 16, 2007, Virginia Tech massacre where 32 people were killed and 24 wounded.

“We had a lot of anonymous reporting, people they thought were going to come and do a school shooting of their own,” detective Robert Katzaroff said in testimony. “Much of it was on the news and Desert Mountain was no exception.”

Police had found chemicals stolen in the burglary had been mixed into explosives and set off at a Scottsdale elementary school.

A girl who knew the teenagers heard one of them say they were planning to shut down the school April 20 and she knew they made explosives before and videotaped the explosions.

She was afraid they were going to set off a bomb with the stolen explosives, so she reported what she knew to the school resource officer, a police officer who works on campus.

When they called Thomas Coletto, 18, the officer heard him say they were actually going to shut down the school on April 23, and they were going to use a stolen school radio to call in a bomb threat, the detective testified.

4 comments:

  1. I STILL BELIEVE THAT THESE STUDENTS SHOULD BE DEALT WITH AS HARSHLY AS IF THEY ACTUALLY COMMITTED THE CRIME. WHAT HAPPENED TO CRIME OF PREMEDITATION?THIS IS EXACTLY WHAT THESE PEOPLE ARE DOING. THEY ARE OLD ENOUGH TO COMPREHEND THE SERIOUSNESS OF THEIR ACTIONS. (OF COURSE, SOME PROBABLY HAD PARENTS WHO HAD EXCUSES FOR EVERYTHING THESE KIDS DID WRONG THAT WAS UNACCEPTABLE TO THE NORMS.)

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  2. Dear anonymous,
    What happened to innocent until proven guilty? The last time I checked we still lived in the United States a free country, you know justice for all? If you took the time to actually read the article it says the “atmosphere was charged” and there was a lot of “anonymous reporting” and “people thought” . The students aren’t facing charges of terrorism or disrupting the school because there never was any threat. It was nothing more than kids spreading rumors that became uncontrollable and these students got caught in the middle of it and became the scapegoats for the high school officials who needed to save their jobs and appease the prissy north Scottsdale parents.

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  3. For FACTS regarding Brent Clark: visit www.tlc24seven.webs.com. He did NOT make any threats, he did NOT inttend to return to the school, and as for being able to assess a threat based on social, family and other long-term factors, the Mcpa Cty Prosecutor refuses to LOOK at those things. THIS BOY HAS TBI: prison is a death sentence. Contact me if you want the proof! Brent's mom

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  4. By posting your comment I by no means agree with your site nor your point of view - Everyone deserves the right to speak. I do understand you may have a natural tendency to protect your child. I understand you feel pain over the situation and maybe some of your points have a basis. However, the world is full of psychopaths, perhaps TBI may be the cause of many of them. I, however, do not wish to live in fear for my life over these people. Perhaps your son feels some level of remorse, which should play in his favour.
    The thing is, you were aware of his problem and the possible results, why did you not have him committed as a potential harm to himself and others? Perhaps some level of incarceration, beit in a state mental facility or a prison is exactly what is needed in this case.

    Thank you for taking the time to express your point of view.

    Here are some Lyrics from Canadian Rockers Rush which shed a little light on the situation

    "Lock And Key"

    I don't want to face the killer instinct
    Face it in you or me

    We carry a sensitive cargo
    Below the waterline
    Ticking like a time bomb
    With a primitive design
    Behind the finer feelings
    This civilized veneer
    The heart of a lonely hunter
    Guards a dangerous frontier

    The balance can sometimes fail
    Strong emotions can tip the scale

    Don't want to silence a desperate voice
    For the sake of security
    No one wants to make a terrible choice
    On the price of being free
    I don't want to face the killer instinct
    Face it in you or me
    So we keep it under lock and key

    It's not a matter of mercy
    It's not a matter of laws
    Plenty of people will kill you
    For some fanatical cause
    It's not a matter of conscience
    A search for probable cause
    It's just a matter of instinct
    A matter of fatal flaws

    No reward for resistance
    No assistance, no applause

    Don't want to silence a desperate voice
    For the sake of security

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