WASECA, Minn. – Lawyers for the teenager accused of plotting to set off bombs and shoot students at the local school won a minor victory in a hearing Wednesday when Judge Gerald Wolf ordered that a notebook outlining the plot and all references to it be sealed, at least for the time being.
The 180-page notebook, which dates back to July, is a key piece of evidence for the prosecution, which contends the teen was close to carrying out his plan before he was detected. Authorities allege that John LaDue plotted to kill his mother, father and sister, then create a diversion for first responders so he could go to Waseca Junior/Senior High School to carry out a massacre.
A larger issue loomed during the proceedings: how the justice system should treat a 17-year-old accused of making horrific — but unfulfilled — plans.
John LaDue's father said after the hearing that his family is worried that if prosecutors succeed in certifying the teen as an adult and sending him to prison, he will lose his chance at a future, over a plan he never carried out.
David LaDue said he believes his son would never have acted on his dark thoughts: "I don't see how he would have ever been able to actually do that, no matter how much he would have liked to entertain that idea … because it's inhuman."
In court Wednesday, John LaDue wore an oversize suit coat and respectfully answered basic questions before his attorneys discussed their motions to seal the notebook and keep out statements the teen made to police.
Authorities said they found the teen with bomb-making materials in a storage locker in late April, after a 911 caller grew suspicious when she saw the teen go inside and close the door.
He soon told authorities that he had intended to kill "as many students as he could," according to the charges, by setting off pressure cooker bombs and gunning down students in the halls.