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Education

San Diego Mentioned In Unfounded Threat Sent To L.A. Schools

A gate to Birmingham Community Charter High School in Van Nuys is locked with a sign stating that school is closed, Dec. 15, 2015.
Associated Press
A gate to Birmingham Community Charter High School in Van Nuys is locked with a sign stating that school is closed, Dec. 15, 2015.

An unfounded threat of widespread violence targeting Los Angeles schools this week made passing mention about supposed plans to spread the mayhem into San Diego as well, authorities acknowledged Wednesday.

The anonymous email, sent to Los Angeles Unified School District board members Tuesday, described a supposed scheme to bomb numerous L.A. campuses and included similarly menacing statements about other Southern California communities and New York.

Authorities in San Diego — who did not receive the threatening message themselves but got word of it secondhand — investigated and decided that the threats were not credible but took some added local security steps to be on the safe side, city officials said.

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"The email, which focused almost entirely on Los Angeles, referred to San Diego in passing, along with other Southern California cities," said Matt Awbrey, spokesman for Mayor Kevin Faulconer's office.

"The San Diego Police Department and San Diego Unified (School District) police did not believe the message posed a credible threat, but in an abundance of caution provided extra patrols at local schools," Awbrey said. "San Diego law enforcement will continue to coordinate with state and federal officials and remain vigilant."

The threat, which prompted daylong closures of more than 900 Los Angeles Unified campuses in the nation's second-largest school district, did not specifically mention San Diego schools, only the city in general.

A copy of the email, provided to KPBS by a San Diego school official, said: "If you cancel classes, the bombings will take place regardless, and we will bring our guns to the streets and offices of Los Angeles, San Bernardino, Bakersfield and San Diego."

Los Angeles-based ABC7 was the first to report that the threatening message included mentions of the cities.

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"If you look at the words, it's very vague," said police Lt. Lt. Scott Wahl said on Wednesday.