Stissing Mountain target of second bomb threat hoax

PINE PLAINS — Classes at Stissing Mountain Middle/High School were disrupted on Tuesday, Nov. 29, due to a bomb threat, the second in less than a month.The first bomb threat hoax occurred on Monday, Nov. 7, and was investigated by the Dutchess County Sheriff’s Office. Deputy T.J. Hanlon said the investigation into that incident is still ongoing.It is unknown whether this second bomb threat hoax was perpetrated by the same person or persons as the first incident, or whether it is a copycat job.As with the first bomb threat, a note was found in a bathroom. This message, which was scrawled on a wall in an upstairs high school boys’ bathroom, stated that a bomb would go off. New York State Police Lieutenant Thomas Jones said the police did not see the original message because the student who found it partially erased it before informing a principal; therefore, the police report did not contain exact wording.“At about 12:50 p.m., writing was reported in a lavatory in the middle/high school building that could be interpreted as a bomb threat,” said the first in a series of press releases from the district that day. “Although we believe the threat to be a hoax, the building has been evacuated and law enforcement and fire departments are assisting in the search of the building according to safety plan protocols. All students, faculty and staff are safe.”Troopers from the state police Rhinebeck barracks responded to the call about the bomb threat and used a bomb-sniffing dog to search the school with the aid of district personnel.Jones said it is common for district personnel to enter the building and aid in the bomb searches because they know the layout of the school and would be able to tell if anything is out of the ordinary.While evacuated from the building, the students were loaded onto school buses and sent home at 2:15 p.m., the normal dismissal time, according to a press release from the school district.The instruction and dismissal at the other schools in the district were not affected.The building was cleared for re-entry at approximately 2:40 p.m. after searches yielded negative results.Jones said that once the building was deemed safe, the students were allowed to retrieve their personal belongings.All after-school activities in the building were canceled, including the first home games of the basketball season.District Superintendent Linda Kaumeyer said in an interview that the district will be working with all law enforcement departments involved in the two bomb hoax cases.In an effort to prevent a third incident, she said the district will review protocols regarding the supervision of students and will send home letters about the legal penalties and ramifications for propagating information about an unfounded bomb threat.“If necessary, we will take other appropriate measures, as we have done in the past,” she said.Interim Principal Anthony Celenza conducted an assembly for the middle school students on Thursday, Dec. 1, to explain the consequences of instigating a bomb scare and the seriousness of the disruptions to the school day.Kaumeyer said the entire school community, including the students, feels “very inconvenienced by the actions of a few. ... No one wants to have their school day interrupted by a prank.”Kaumeyer said the school community polices what happens within the school, and the district often depends on the students for information that will help the authorities apprehend any wrongdoers.Kaumeyer encourages anyone with information about the incidents to call the school’s district office at 518-398-7181.

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