-Caveat Lector- www.ctrl.org DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER ========== CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please! These are sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis- directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

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Om

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-Caveat Lector- Thankfully your lack of support does not prevent me
from raising a CIA drugs refugee many of whose
playmates and neighbors have been shot in his sight,
or ignored to death while suffocating from asthma, or
crashed into the Pentagon. You will not read all of this
in the Washington Post, as usual.

Last Friday was the last day of school for him. He
spent the day in a nearby housing development. It
seems that two boys were copying Columbine at
the school, Bull Run Middle school, about twenty
miles west of DC.

Webfairy and Eastman may assert that there
were no bullets because the father of one of these
Columbine copycats worked at Mitre Corp.
In fact no shots were fired. The father of one of
the two Columbine copycats verbally abuses his
son, if my sources are correct, which may explain
why his son reacted so strongly to verbal taunts and
abuse at school. He was somehow sensitized to
perceive the cruel moronic patter of his schoolmates
as over his threshold for abuse. Profile that.

"his older brother, who is an Eagle Scout. His father, who
works for Mitre Corp., is a scout leader...on the board of
the homeowner's association"

The homeowner's association, that's the link, they have
no regard for individual rights.

I happened by a meeting of twenty policemen
in a parking lot, then saw a roadblock, then saw an
unmarked SWAT truck drive by. I deduced that a
bomb scare or hostage situation must be going on.
The school was the most likely site. I called my CIA
drugs refugee on his cell phone, and he told me he had
been evacuated to a "safe" house near the school. I kept
in touch with him and another student by cell phones for
the next few hours.

As I drove around the perimeter, about a mile out,
I was informed by a neighbor where to park to bypass
police roadblocks and reach my CIA drugs refugee if
I so desired. Since I was in contact by cell phone I
opted for picking him up later after his group
was bussed to the central location from which the
students were released to parents--Tyler Elementary.
I suffered extreme sunburn to my scalp, due to
thinning hair, while waiting at Tyler. My sunburn
would have been worse if not for kid cell phones.

One of the two boys arrested was able to carry two
rifles and a shotgun into school about 8:30am by
concealing them in a folding lawnchair carry bag.
He told his mother that the "chair" was for "field
day". She works in the cafeteria line.

One of the boys walked the halls with a .30-'06
rifle, then entered the office and pointed his rifle
at people. Someone turned on the PA system and
everyone in school heard what he said to those
in the office, and they heard the principal scream.
It is a major point whether the boy with the rifle
in the office told someone to turn on the PA system
to terrorize students and teachers in all the classrooms,
or if that was done without his knowledge for whatever
reason.

Near the office the assistant principal, Mr. Addington,
recognized a familiar "lock and load" sound when he went
into the bathroom. In a stall he found a boy with a .22
caliber rifle and a .410 shotgun. Mr. Addington was able
to neutralize that threat.

At some point students were told to lie down in
classrooms, doors locked, lights off.

A Prince William county police officer is assigned
to the school, has an office there, but Officer Montgomery
was apparently not there that day. It was the last day of
school, and who would expect such ingratitude from
students?

Police arrived in ten minutes after a phone call. They
walked up behind the one remaining armed student
while he was talking to the heroic assistant principal,
Mr. Addington. Mr. Addington stepped back and the
student obeyed police who told him to surrender his
father's .30-'06 high-powered rifle. Later police picked
up three dozen other assorted firearms at their home.
The mother was arrested because she had seen the
three long guns in her van in the school parking lot
and merely locked her van, thus breaking the law
against having firearms on school property. Her
son had a key when he went back to the van at 8:30
to get his weapons.

-Bob

http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A51760-2004Jun18?language=printer

Armed Boy, 12, Arrested in Va. School Plot
Student Planned Attack, Police Say

By Christina A. Samuels and Josh White
Washington Post Staff Writers
Saturday, June 19, 2004; Page A01

A 12-year-old boy plotting to frighten or even kill students who had teased him and then hold hostages to extort money was arrested yesterday morning at a Prince William County middle school after an administrator found him with a loaded rifle and two other guns, police said.

The seventh-grader was arrested in full camouflage gear on the last day of school after officials at Bull Run Middle School locked down the building and police stormed it under a plan developed after the shootings at Colorado's Columbine High School in 1999.

Police also arrested the boy's mother, Naomi Lewis, 38, a cafeteria worker at the school in the county's Gainesville section, and charged her with possession of a weapon on school property, law enforcement sources said. The boy had gotten a ride to school with his mother and left the guns in her car. Lewis noticed the guns and locked the car but never reported that they were there, police said in a statement. The boy later went back with a car key and retrieved the guns, police said.

Lewis did not know her son had a key and did not know of the plot, sources said. The guns belonged to the family, and neighbors said police removed about 20 additional weapons from the home on Brave Court in Haymarket.

Police Chief Charlie T. Deane said detectives believe that the boy wanted to scare or hurt other students and that he also was planning to take hostages.

"Some information leads us to believe there could have been a hostage situation with demands for money," Deane said. "It's still early, and we just don't know the extent of it yet."

Detectives were questioning about 10 students who learned of the student's plan in recent days but either did not take him seriously or did not believe he would go through with it. Deane said police are also investigating whether some students had agreed to take part in the plan and whether others "were going to do it and then changed their mind."

No shots were fired, and the student never pointed a gun at anyone during his apprehension, police said. It is unclear whether the student pointed the gun before police arrived. When he was arrested, he was talking to a school administrator and carrying a loaded .30-06 rifle. Police also found a .410-gauge shotgun and a .22-caliber rifle in a bathroom, where the boy was initially spotted.

As police charged the school, the 1,100 students inside the two-year-old building were locked in their darkened classrooms. After police went room to room searching for weapons, the students were taken to nearby Tyler Elementary School, where shaken parents arrived throughout the late morning and early afternoon to pick them up.

"You hear all this stuff, and you never think it'll be you," said Jane Buchanan, mother of a seventh-grader.

Her son Taylor Buchanan, 13, said: "I thought that we would sign yearbooks and say goodbye and that's it. I didn't get to do either."

Deane and law enforcement sources said the incident began about 8:30 a.m., when the student sneaked out of the building and to his mother's car to retrieve the guns. He went first to a bathroom, and as he popped a cartridge into the .30-06 rifle, an assistant principal on routine rounds heard the unmistakable sound of a gun being loaded. The administrator called police, and the school system and police department immediately implemented the county's school violence response plan, put into place after the Columbine shootings.

Officer Bryan Nevitt arrived first with a team of others. He said he looked through a window and spotted the student holding a rifle and speaking to the assistant principal. Nevitt and his team entered the building and caught the administrator's attention. The administrator moved away, and the officers challenged the boy. He complied with their orders and was immediately arrested.

Under the response plan, officers quickly formed a search team, entered the school and began separating possible shooters from possible victims by isolating the armed student and locking down the rest of the school. Police in Colorado were criticized for cordoning off the school and waiting for reinforcements as children inside were being shot.

After cornering the seventh-grader, the teams then went room to room and did not let any students leave until police were certain there were no other weapons. Prince William police trained for months in 2000 for just such an event. Also, every year, each county school goes through a lockdown drill.

Principal William Bixby said all teachers and staff members locked their doors, turned off their lights and got everyone on the floor. Some students were caught between classes. Sarah Ruppert said she was walking to the library with a classmate on an errand for her teacher. She knocked on the locked door and was grabbed by the school's librarian, who told them to run to a back room.

"They were saying, 'Run to the back, run to the back,' " Sarah said. "That's when I saw [the student] outside the library, wearing Army fatigues and a red bandanna." He was also carrying "a big huge rifle," she said.

Most students were escorted from the school before they could gather their belongings to take home for the summer. School officials said students would be allowed in today and Monday and also would be provided counseling. The suspect is a member of a Boy Scout troop, a neighbor said, as is his older brother, who is an Eagle Scout. His father, who works for Mitre Corp., is a scout leader.

The student, a shy, slightly overweight boy who got good grades and liked to play video games, was "the last person you would ever imagine doing something like this," said Rebecca Bare, a neighbor. She is on the board of a homeowners association with the suspect's father.

"He's the one kid you would never have a problem with; the nicest kid in the neighborhood. He would say, 'No, sir' and 'Yes, ma'am,' " she said.

But the student had been hatching a plan, said a woman whose son is close friends with him.

"He said he wanted to take over the school, and he was trying to get other kids to help him," said the mother, who spoke on condition of anonymity because her son was one of several boys he approached. "He'd been talking about it all year."

She said the student told the other boys he was preparing a list of demands that "included a helicopter. He was so imaginative that no one took him seriously, because it sounded like a movie," the mother said. "They thought it was some kid spouting off." The woman's son added, "Most people just kind of ignored it."

Several police cars and a crime scene unit van were parked outside the family's two-level, cream-colored townhouse in Haymarket yesterday afternoon. Detectives were inside and at one point were seen carting out computers and other materials, including bags of guns, neighbors said. No one answered the door at the townhouse.

The boy has been charged with possession of a firearm on school property, possession of a firearm by a minor, use of a firearm in commission of a felony, conspiracy to commit abduction for money and conspiracy to commit murder. He is being held without bond at the Juvenile Detention Home. His mother was being held on $5,000 bond.

Some students said the boy was picked on because of his glasses and clothes and for other reasons.

Staff writers Jerry Markon, Maria Glod and Eric M. Weiss and staff researcher Bobbye Pratt contributed to this report


Please let us stay on topic and be civil.-Home Page- www.cia-drugs.org
OM



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www.ctrl.org DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER ========== CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please! These are sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis- directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector. ======================================================================== Archives Available at:

http://www.mail-archive.com/[EMAIL PROTECTED]/ <A HREF="">ctrl</A> ======================================================================== To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email: SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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Om


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