A man was arrested Thursday in Missouri after allegedly threatening to use a rifle to shoot up a northeast Minneapolis elementary school.
Waite Park Elementary School officials received a call just before 11 a.m. Thursday from a man who said he was planning to go to the school armed with an AR-15 rifle, Minneapolis Police Chief Brian O’Hara said at a news conference.
The caller indicated he was planning to shoot “everything he sees moving,” the chief said.
Police quickly responded to the school, which was placed on lockdown. School staffers notified parents before ushering students out to be taken home.
Investigators found out the suspect was known to two people at the school, according to O’Hara, who did not elaborate. They checked an address where the suspect may have lived about two miles from the school, but determined he was not at the address or in Minneapolis.
Using license plate readers to track a vehicle owned by the suspect, officers working with the Jackson County Sheriff’s Office in the Kansas City area determined he was in Missouri, where he was taken into custody shortly before 2 p.m. He was being held on suspicion of making terroristic threats, O’Hara said.
The chief acknowledged there was “extreme fear and anxiety from students, parents, teachers and staff” in the wake of the fatal shooting last month at Annunciation Catholic Church in south Minneapolis.
“We take every threat seriously, and I want to be clear: If you make these threats against a school, against a house of worship in our city, we will act swiftly, and we will employ every tool available to all of law enforcement to find you, arrest you and bring you to justice as quickly as possible,” O’Hara said.