Posted on 04/29/2005 1:05:10 PM PDT by MississippiMasterpiece
A concerned citizen spotted a male juvenile carrying a suspiciously concealed item into Marshall Junior High School early Thursday morning.
Police were called. The school was locked down. Adjacent streets were closed and law officers were perched on roofs with weapons.
The drama ended about two hours later when the suspicious item was identified:
A 30-inch burrito, prepared as an extra-credit assignment and wrapped inside tinfoil and a white T-shirt.
I didnt know whether to laugh or cry, school Principal Diana Russell said after the mystery was solved.
Overall, Id say we had a good learning day.
The incident began about 8:30 a.m., Russell said.
The school was locked down no one allowed to enter or leave and students locked inside their classrooms until police searched the premises and determined there was no immediate danger.
Russell said the students burrito was discovered after she brought the school together in the auditorium to explain what she knew about the series of events.
The kid was sitting there as Im describing this (citizen report of a student with a suspicious package) and hes thinking, Oh, my gosh, theyre talking about my burrito.
After the meeting, which included students and parents, Russell said the student, Michael Morrissey, approached her.
He said, I think Im the person they saw, Russell said. He said, It was my extra-credit project. I put a white T-shirt over it because I wanted it to stay warm.
Within minutes after the citizen report, representatives from New Mexico State Police, Clovis police and the Curry County Sheriffs Department were on the scene.
Weve trained for incidents just like this the training just kicked in, said Sgt. Jim Schoeffel of the Clovis Police Department.
Schoeffel said the streets closest to the school, Main and Commerce Way, were blocked off as officers positioned themselves on the roof and around points of exit and entry at the school.
Parents, alerted to the incident by a local radio report, descended on the school, where they initially found little information.
More than 30 parents congregated in the Lowes Grocery Store parking lot adjacent from Marshall High. Visibly shaken, they gathered around in a semi-circle, straining their necks, awaiting news.
Heather Black, who has a son at the school, echoed the sentiments of the crowd.
There needs to be security before the kids walk through the door, she said.
Russell said about 75 students left the school with their parents soon after the lockdown was called off. At the time, the suspicious item had not been located.
Russell praised police for their efforts and school officials for following procedures properly.
She said she learned several things from the incident, primarily related to informing parents. She said the school received multiple telephone calls from parents who talked with school secretaries who had little information.
All they (secretaries) were told is that it was a code blue (lockdown) and they didnt know if it was a drill or not, Russell said.
If I had it to do over again, we would have alerted the secretaries that we had an actual threat ... so we would not come across like we were trying to hide something.
Russell said 98 percent of the parents were understanding and supportive of school officials, but we had a handful that were very verbal and one had to be escorted away by police.
But the bottom line, Russell said, at the end of the day, I feel pretty good about our response. This worked.
What kind of school is this?
Make a run for the border....
In my house burrito's are Weapons of Mass Destruction!
PU
"Drop the chalupa!"
This is one of the dumbest things I have read in quite sometime. And that is saying quite a lot.
A school of idiots, from a community of the same.
Heather Black, who has a son at the school, echoed the sentiments of the crowd. There needs to be security before the kids walk through the door, she said.
"Something happened, so somebody has to do something sometime soon!"
Next time make a pizza!!
The student is fortunate he wasn't tasered after he identified himself in order to secure the burrito more quickly.
*snicker*
We would carry them to and from the rifle range that was about a mile from the school. No one was ever hurt and no one ever asked questions about it.
Bumping for a later read. This thread just has too much potential.
Check out my package, hun - they're all talking 'bout MY burrito.
I'm suspicious of "concerned citizens." I don't think they have anything better to do than watch what other people are doing and jump to conclusions based on zero evidence.
I'll never forget that I 'celebrated' my 22nd birthday in Clovis, NM. The evening itself was totally forgettable, which is why I'll never forget that I was in Clovis, NM.
I don't think I've ever seen a lamer excuse for incorporation than Clovis, NM. Except for maybe Friona, TX.
A public school, where manual labor apparently substitutes nicely for subject mastery.
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