High Senior Arrested; School Bomb Threat Alleged
October 26, 2009 by Homeland Security NTARC News
Filed under Incident Reports

Sign On Diego reports that a senior at Ramona High School who told friends and others that he was going to blow up the school with homemade bombs made of C-4 explosive and hand grenades was arrested early Sunday.
Korey Flad, 19, faces charges that include threatening to use a weapon of mass destruction, threatening a school and making criminal threats, the department said.
Ramona sheriff’s Detective Mike McNeill said no explosives or grenades were found at Flad’s home.
It was all talk, McNeill said. As far as investigators can tell, he did not have any access to C-4 or grenades. βHe was remorseful, cooperative, forthcoming, honest and compliant,β McNeill said.
Flad does not have any history of trouble with authorities, McNeill said, adding that he comes from βa regular middle-class home. There were no family problems.β
via Ramona High senior arrested; school threat alleged – SignOnSanDiego.com.
High School Mixes Algebra, Homeland Security
June 9, 2009 by national
Filed under Homeland Security News

Flanked by hand-drawn posters about terrorist groups, from Al Qaeda to the Ku Klux Klan, Tina Edler solemnly addressed her ninth-grade students.
“One new vocabulary word today is ‘agro-terrorism’,” she said.
The meaning — deliberate sabotage of agriculture or food supplies — flashed on a screen behind her. Opening their school-issued laptops, the teens quickly found a possible example on the Internet.
In 1989, a group calling itself the “Breeders” hit headlines when it threatened to release thousands of crop-killing Mediterranean fruit flies in Southern California unless the government halted aerial pesticide spraying. The spraying continued, and scientists never could determine whether the group played a role in the Medfly infestation that year. Its members were never identified.
“That counts,” Edler said. “It’s part of history.”
Meade High School, where Edler teaches, made its own history this year. The long-troubled public high school become one of the first in the nation to offer a four-year course in domestic security. The goal: to help graduates build careers in one of America’s few growth industries.
“This course will help me get a top-secret security clearance,” said Darryl Bagley, an eager 15-year-old. “That way I can always get a job.”
Meade offers its 2,150 students a standard high school curriculum, including electives like advanced calculus and carpentry. But the 90 ninth-graders who chose the new homeland security program this past school year focused on topics torn from the headlines: Islamic jihadism, nuclear arms, cyber-crime, domestic militias and the like.
New themes even were added to their science, social studies and English classes.
“There’s a lot of homeland security issues in ‘Romeo and Juliet,’ ” said Bill Sheppard, the program coordinator. “Like, how do you deal with infiltration in your own family?”

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