Orange sheriff: Girl lied about abduction
Orange County officials are charging a middle school student with filing a false police report after she claimed last week that someone tried to abduct her from school.
School officials locked down Prospect Heights Middle School on April 30 after a student reported that a man had grabbed her but that she broke free. The student gave officials a physical description that included the man having a scar beneath one eye.
Orange County Sheriff Mark Amos said Monday that the incident
never happened.
“The student admitted to her mother that she made it up and she later told investigators the same thing,” Amos said. “At this point, we’ve spoken with the commonwealth’s attorney and she will be charged.”
Authorities did not release the identity of the 13-year-old girl and offered no motive for the false report.
The report prompted school officials to lock up the middle school while deputies searched the premises. School officials also placed other county schools on either lockdown or increased security.
“A lot of resources went into the investigation,” Amos said. “It affected nearly every school in the district and that impacted a lot of students and there were a lot of emotions involved.”
Prospect Heights school officials said the searches turned up no one in the building and no indication that the students were ever in danger.
“When we received the report we immediately went into lockdown and Sheriff’s Deputy Eric Hopwood, our school resource officer, contacted the Sheriff’s Office,” Principal Frank Leech said at the time. “We were locked down for about 90 minutes.”
During a lockdown, teachers bring students into classrooms, lock doors, turn off lights and keep the students as far away from windows as possible. Exterior doors are also locked and the Sheriff’s Office is notified, Leech explained. Students practice lockdown drills just as they do fire drills, he said.
Leech said a school may be locked down when there is a potential threat to any student or staff on school grounds.
“We really err on the side of caution and, if there’s any sense that an individual staff or student may feel threatened, we’ll lockdown just to be safe,” he said. “We’d rather be proactive.”
Amos said the school system reacted quickly and responsibly.
“You shouldn’t take chances and we take these reports very seriously,” he said. “The school did an absolutely excellent job. They received the report and had the school locked down in no time. They were really on top of it.”
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Reader Reactions
It’s obvious that fabricating a story such as this is a cry for attention of some sort. Let’s just hope this child gets the help she needs and will one day understand what she has done and the pain and suffering she caused others.
She was so quick to tell a bold faced lie. There is no reason to make up lies about something that is untrue. Do you know how many kids that was frighten out of their minds? What about the man power that went into his false investigation. What about the innocent black males that was questioned because simply that they were black. What kind of punshishment do you give a 13 year old? Thats what the commonwealth has to determine. I hope that her punishment will fit her crime.
Unless you know the circumstances and what prompted this to happen..don’t be so quick to judge…let’s sweep around our own back door first…the best thing we can do for this young lady and her family is pray for them.
What kind of punishment do you give a 13 y.o.?
She needs to be punished and I am not talking abouut just community services either.


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