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From our April 26, 2001,
edition.
Officials
defuse rumors of school bomb threat
Roger
Estlack, Clarendon Enterprise
Rumors
of a bomb threat at the Hedley Public Schools last week were just that –
rumors – and nothing more, officials say.
Word
of a supposed bomb threat first surfaced late Thursday, April 12, and was
reported to the Donley County Sheriff’s Department that Friday. Students
were out of school that Friday and the following Monday for Easter
holidays.
Sheriff
Butch Blackburn said an investigation by his department, Constable Mike
Wallendorff, and Hedley ISD found no credible evidence of a threat. A
search by a dog from Interquest Detection Canines of Abilene last Monday
also found no explosives in the school.
“Our
investigation concluded that [the threat] was just a rumor,” Blackburn
said.
The
sheriff did say, however, that a warrant has been issued for the arrest of
17-year-old Hedley resident, Santiago Rodriguez, Jr., in connection with
the March 30 discovery of a one-pound package of Detagel explosive near a
Hedley residence.
Blackburn
said an investigation is still underway in that case, which he believes is
related to an ongoing feud in Hall County.
The
person who supposedly was going to blow up the school was Rodriguez,
Blackburn said. But Rodriguez was reportedly not even in the county at the
time of the supposed threat.
“It’s
kind of hard to blow it up if you’re not here,” Blackburn said.
Rodriguez’s
last known whereabouts was Breckenridge, Blackburn said. He is wanted on
possession of an explosive.
Hedley
ISD Principal Terry Stevens said the rumors of a bomb threat started April
12. A Hedley teacher overheard some students talking about it and reported
it to Stevens. Superintendent Bryan Hill was out of town at the time, he
said.
“This
is one of those cases where so-and-so said that so-and-so said so,”
Stevens said. “But we took every precaution anyway.”
The
principal alerted authorities and informed Hill of what was going on. HISD
administrators called in the search dogs to go through the school while
students were on vacation on Monday, April 16. Neither the dogs nor local
law enforcement found any cause for concern.
Stevens
said on Tuesday, April 17, he came to work early and looked through every
classroom to make sure nothing was different before students and teachers
arrived.
“I
think some of the teachers were mad because we didn’t tell them about
it,” Stevens said. “We felt like it was more important to have a
normal class day on Tuesday and tell them later. It was an administrative
decision, and we stick by it.
“We
felt we were as safe as we could be for our kids,” he said. “We
reacted to the threat and did what we thought was necessary.”
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