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EXPULSIONS TO BE SOUGHT IN BOMB SCARE.


Byline: Bhavna Mistry Staff Writer

VALENCIA - Two Valencia High School Valencia High School may refer to:
  • Valencia High School (Placentia, California), a public high school in Placentia, California.
  • Valencia High School (Santa Clarita, California), a public high school in Santa Clarita, California.
 students arrested in a bomb scare bomb scare namenaza de bomba

bomb scare bomb nalerte f à la bombe

bomb scare nBombenalarm
 will be recommended for expulsion, while one faces arraignment A criminal proceeding at which the defendant is officially called before a court of competent jurisdiction, informed of the offense charged in the complaint, information, indictment, or other charging document, and asked to enter a plea of guilty, not guilty, or as otherwise permitted  today on a charge of placing a facsimile bomb, officials said Thursday.

Principal Paul Priesz said officials will recommend that the school board expel the 15-year-old accused of bringing the homemade device to campus Wednesday morning, as well as another 15-year-old who placed it in a trash can In the Macintosh, a simulated garbage can used for deleting files and folders. The trash can keeps the files intact in case the user wants to restore them, but can be "emptied" from time to time to save disk space. .

Additionally, the teen suspected of crafting the device using household items is scheduled to enter a plea today in Juvenile Court juvenile court

Special court handling problems of delinquent, neglected, or abused children. Two types of cases are processed by a juvenile court: civil matters, often concerning care of an abandoned or impoverished child, and criminal matters, arising from antisocial
 on one charge of placing a facsimile explosive. Investigators have not yet decided whether to seek charges against the second boy.

During Thursday morning announcements, Priesz described for the school's 2,700 students how the device was brought onto campus.

``It looked very impressive and real,'' Priesz told the student body during a live telecast, explaining that the precautions taken were for the students' safety.

Sheriff's officials said they couldn't see any explosive material
This article is concerned solely with chemical explosives. There are many other varieties of more exotic explosive material, and theoretical methods of causing explosions such as nuclear explosives and antimatter, and other methods of producing explosions, such as abrupt
 in the device but are testing it to be certain.

News that the pair of 15-year-olds had been arrested drew applause Wednesday night during an eighth-grade orientation when the principal briefed parents on the incident. In classrooms Thursday, much talk centered around the previous day's events and the two boys suspected of participating in making and placing the device.

``It was really scary,'' said Jamilah Murrah, 18, a senior. ``At the beginning, we thought it was a joke, then they kept moving us further and further back and we knew it had to be serious.''

``It could have killed people,'' Murrah added. ``We never thought it would happen here. We never thought it would happen to us.''

``I don't know Don't know (DK, DKed)

"Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party.
 why somebody would do that,'' said sophomore Mike McIntyre, 15. ``How was it worth it anyway, to bring a fake bomb to school? They're just dumb kids who thought it would be funny.''
COPYRIGHT 2000 Daily News
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2000, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:Apr 7, 2000
Words:321
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