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Phoenix police: Social-media school threats can be charged as terroristic threats; 14-year-old arrested

Paradise Valley Unified District (4241) · October 27, 2025
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

A Phoenix Police Department investigator told a Paradise Valley Unified District briefing that social-media threats to schools are treated as terroristic threats, described how platforms and precinct technology help investigations, and said a 14-year-old was arrested within 24 hours after a Snapchat threat.

At a Paradise Valley Unified District (4241) safety briefing, an investigator with the Phoenix Police Department’s Violent Crimes Bureau said social-media threats to schools are treated as criminal terroristic threats and described how investigators traced and arrested a suspect within hours.

“This is making a terroristic threat. So for anybody who thinks it's a joke, having a class 3 felony in your employment record is not a joke,” the investigator said, summarizing the legal stakes and the department’s approach.

The investigator gave a recent case as an example: a threat sent over Snapchat in which a student said a classmate would be shot during a specified time at school. Within several hours, Snapchat provided law enforcement with account data — including username, email, account creation date, phone number, birth date and a recently used IP address — and investigators obtained GPS…

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