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The sentence includes a provision that [he] not possess computers, or electronic devices such as video games or cell phones while he is on probation for two years after his release from custody. He also must undergo counseling and complete 40 hours of community service.
A boy whose identity was stolen and used to make bomb threats against Timberline High School has been forced to enroll in a different school, his mother said in court Monday.Click HereThe boy was spat on and threatened by other students who erroneously thought that he had made the threats to blow up the school, she said.
One Timberline student who attended Monday’s sentencing said outside court that she and many other students were frightened by the repeated threats to bomb the school. Ariel Starr, 17, said that she missed some of her finals because she was afraid to go to school, and the threats were “disrupting everyone’s learning.”
Normally, students who are expelled can apply for reinstatement, Williams explained outside court, but Thomas’ order in Josh’s sentencing that he have no contact with the school district for 10 years will preclude him from applying for reinstatment. Josh can have no contact with the victims in the case for 5 years after his release, according to the sentence.
FBI agents trying to track the source of e-mailed bomb threats against a Washington high school last month sent the suspect a secret surveillance program designed to surreptitiously monitor him and report back to a government server, according to an FBI affidavit obtained by Wired News.