Police: Skokie students involved in ‘threat’ at school released

SHARE Police: Skokie students involved in ‘threat’ at school released
copyofdscn6434.jpg

Two middle school students taken into custody on Wednesday for allegedly “plotting to shoot someone” at their north suburban school have been released, but could still face charges.

Just after 10:30 a.m. Wednesday, officers were called by Skokie School District 73.5 officials to McCracken Middle School when a student reported she learned “she was a possible target of the offenders,” a statement from Skokie police said.

Two Skokie boys, ages 13 and 14, were taken into custody in connection with an alleged plot to commit “a shooting at the school in the near future,” police said.

Three additional students suspected of knowing about the plan were questioned by police before being released to their parents, police said. Investigators determined those students had no criminal involvement.

Neither of the two boys taken into custody had known access to firearms and no weapons were recovered, police said. The extent of the plot, and the role of social media in the incident, remained under investigation Thursday.

The boys have been released from Skokie police custody and referred to court via the Juvenile Justice Bureau of the Cook County state’s attorney’s office, according to a statement from Skokie police spokesman Eric Swaback. The state’s attorney’s office will review the case and determine whether to pursue charges against the boys.

The state’s attorney’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment Thursday evening.

Anyone with information or details about the incident was asked to call 911.

The Latest
Seven lawsuits filed by former football players will be temporarily consolidated with a lawsuit filed by former head coach Pat Fitzgerald during the pretrial process.
The city is willing to put private interests ahead of public benefit and cheer on a wrongheaded effort to build a massive domed stadium — that would be perfect for Arlington Heights — on Chicago’s lakefront.
Art
The Art Institute of Chicago, responding to allegations by New York prosecutors, says it’s ‘factually unsupported and wrong’ that Egon Schiele’s ‘Russian War Prisoner’ was looted by Nazis from the original owner’s heirs.
April Perry has instead been appointed to the federal bench. But it’s beyond disgraceful that Vance, a Trump acolyte, used the Senate’s complex rules to block Perry from becoming the first woman in the top federal prosecutor’s job for the Northern District of Illinois.