Home » News » Crime
December 21. 2012 9:48AM
Police presence at Windham schools following Internet threat
WINDHAM - Windham's schools will have additional police presence on Friday after a school board member received news of an threat made over the Internet, believed to be against the local school district, late Thursday night.
Superintendent Henry LaBranche said it's unclear at this point if the threat is a credible one, but he's not taking any chances.
“This week we've already been on high alert,” he said on Friday morning. “Today, we'll have police detail at each school for the entire day.”
School officials learned of the threat at around 9:20 p.m. Thursday evening, when the principal of a parochial school in Willimantic, Conn. contacted a School Board member.
LaBranche said the Connecticut school district, which is also known as Windham, received threats via Twitter, but school officials there were later told “that the threat was intended for Windham, New Hampshire.”
By 10 p.m. Thursday night, both the FBI and the NH state police had been notified, and the incident is now under investigation.
“We immediately put our emergency plan into place,” said the superintendent.
The exact nature of the threat wasn't revealed, LaBranche added.
“There are a bunch of 'unknowns' right now. But we're being very cautious,” he stressed.
Parents were notified of the incident by email last night. Attendance at Windham High School on Friday morning was 68% of students enrolled, attendance at the middle school was only 60%, according to LaBranche.
Police have already been visible at the district's schools this week in the wake of the deadly shootings at Sandy Hook Elementary School.
Windham Police have been making “rolling patrols” at each school since Monday and school administrators have been taking a closer look at each school's security measures.
During Monday's school day, the high school was briefly placed on lockdown after several school employees reported hearing “a loud bang” inside the school that morning.
Police and fire officials conducted a sweep of the entire facility, though Police Chief Gerald Lewis said “nothing out of the ordinary” was found.
AGuilmet@newstote.com
Superintendent Henry LaBranche said it's unclear at this point if the threat is a credible one, but he's not taking any chances.
“This week we've already been on high alert,” he said on Friday morning. “Today, we'll have police detail at each school for the entire day.”
School officials learned of the threat at around 9:20 p.m. Thursday evening, when the principal of a parochial school in Willimantic, Conn. contacted a School Board member.
LaBranche said the Connecticut school district, which is also known as Windham, received threats via Twitter, but school officials there were later told “that the threat was intended for Windham, New Hampshire.”
By 10 p.m. Thursday night, both the FBI and the NH state police had been notified, and the incident is now under investigation.
“We immediately put our emergency plan into place,” said the superintendent.
The exact nature of the threat wasn't revealed, LaBranche added.
“There are a bunch of 'unknowns' right now. But we're being very cautious,” he stressed.
Parents were notified of the incident by email last night. Attendance at Windham High School on Friday morning was 68% of students enrolled, attendance at the middle school was only 60%, according to LaBranche.
Police have already been visible at the district's schools this week in the wake of the deadly shootings at Sandy Hook Elementary School.
Windham Police have been making “rolling patrols” at each school since Monday and school administrators have been taking a closer look at each school's security measures.
During Monday's school day, the high school was briefly placed on lockdown after several school employees reported hearing “a loud bang” inside the school that morning.
Police and fire officials conducted a sweep of the entire facility, though Police Chief Gerald Lewis said “nothing out of the ordinary” was found.
AGuilmet@newstote.com
- Mass. residents charged after Hollis man beaten and stabbed - 2
- Judge gives Salem engineer with underwater mortgage year in jail for growing pot - 1
- Teen party takes Derry rep by surprise - 24
- Not-guilty plea expected in death at Danville chief's home - 20
- Police say woman was assaulted for hours - 5
- Inmate will let judge decide fraud ID case - 0
- Dzhokhar Tsarnaev left ‘deathbed’ note inside boat, source says - 0
- Manchester police officer found not guilty of simple assault - 20
- Dartmouth student charged with rape of another student - 0
Mass. men arrested on drugs, weapons charges
READER COMMENTS: 0- John Habib's City Sports: Tourney time nears for JVs, too - 0
- NHIAA Roundup: Hanover's Cravero hurls another no-hitter - 0
- Lawyer says Northern Pass in 'a corner' - 0
- Fisher Cats score in 9th to win - 0
- Sox edge Twins in 10, 3-2 - 0
- Nashua man arrested on charges of sexually assaulting underage girl - 0
- Memorial boys take city track meet for 10th straight year - 0
- NHIAA Baseball: Penmen win again - 0
- Ceremony for fallen police officers honors service and sacrifice - 0
NHIAA Tennis: Bedford is championship-focused
READER COMMENTS: 0- Should applicants for jobless benefits have to pass a drug test?
- Yes
- 78%
- No
- 22%
- Total Votes: 1424



