MIDDLEBURG — An 18-year-old Beavertown woman has been jailed and two juveniles face charges after the three allegedly penned a bomb threat letter targeting Midd-West High School.
The superintendent of Midd-West schools didn’t punish the two juveniles who admitted they, with Jami Lilah Louise Brouse, had written the letter but never delivered it. But upon learning of the letter, Midd-West High School’s vice principal called police.
Brouse, of 128 N. Sassafras St., Beavertown, is being held in lieu of $25,000 bail in Snyder County Jail after allegedly suggesting to her friends, ages 15 and 16, during an April 4 gym class that they write a bomb threat letter, a criminal affidavit reports.
They discussed placing the bomb threat letter in the girls’ locker room rest room, or in a locker.
Brouse, who recently quit school, faces charges of making terrorist threats, criminal conspiracy and disorderly conduct.
The motive for writing the letter was to get out of school for a day, Middleburg police officer Chad Thomas said.
The letter indicated the school was going to burn on a specified date, and that bombs were already planted in the building.
Superintendent: One girl comes clean
After writing the note, the students placed it in a notebook. They then made plans to go to a Beavertown library to retype the letter so that authorities would not be able to trace their handwriting.
“There was no bomb threat,” Midd-West Superintendent Wesley Knapp said. “The threat was never made. They weren’t going to really do it.”
One of the girls contacted his office.
“She had been in this conversation,” he said, “and didn’t want it to happen, didn’t want her friends to get in trouble. That was the honorable thing to do.”
He met with all three students immediately the next morning, before school began.
“I talked to them about the fact that if they did (make a threat), they could be in serious trouble,” Knapp said.
Knapp said there was no reason for him to see the note.
“If someone calls in a bomb threat, I take it as serious as anyone,” Knapp said. “But I worked with kids long enough to know they talk about doing things, but then they don’t.
“As far as I am concerned, it was a nonevent, because it didn’t happen.”
The vice principal of the high school, Bernadette Lucas, contacted authorities about the letter the next day, Thomas said.
“I was dismayed with it,” Knapp said, adding that Lucas apparently did not understand he had already dealt with the situation.
Knapp knew nothing of the authorities’ involvement until he received a phone call from Brouse’s father, saying she had been arrested late last week.
Brouse dropped out of school before being taken to the Snyder County Jail, Thomas said.
Brouse was arraigned on the charges at district court in Mifflinburg. A preliminary hearing is scheduled for Monday at the office of District Justice Willis E. Savidge, 32 E. Market St., Middleburg.
The other students are still attending classes but face juvenile charges.
-- E-mail comments to tpursell@dailyitem.com
News
Bomb threat puts 1in jail
Letter never delivered; school chief never saw it
- News
-
-
State police probe murder-suicide near Watsontown
WATSONTOWN - An 85-year-old Watsontown man shot and killed a 69-year-old female companion then turned the gun on himself Tuesday afternoon, state police at Milton report.
-
2 Valley schools in top 5.5% in nation
LEWISBURG — U.S. News & World Report magazine has ranked Lewisburg Area as the 15th-best academic high school in Pennsylvania and the 803rd best in the nation, according to a report released earlier this month.
-
Northumberland opts to build sewage plant
NORTHUMBERLAND — Ending months of speculation, the Northumberland Sewer Authority has voted to build a water treatment plant, at an estimated cost of $9 million, to replace the 40-year-old sewage plant at 100 Water St.
-
Mifflinburg school board OKs millage increase
MIFFLINBURG — The Mifflinburg school board Tuesday night approved raising the property tax rate to the maximum allowed under the index, equaling about a $30 increase a year for the average taxpayer.
-
Support grows for city garden
SUNBURY— More than a month after several Bucknell University students resurrected an empty city lot by transforming the land into a full-size garden, neighbors, nearby residents and now business leaders from outside Sunbury have decided to chip in by donating seeds and planting tools in order to spruce up the corner lot.
-
Stat of the Day: 21,776
Stat of the day: 21,776. That's the number of high schools evaluated nationwide by U.S. News & World Report, after which the magazine determined that Lewisburg Area High was the 803rd best in the U.S., and Selinsgrove Area, 1,187th.
-
State House approves sales-tax exemption for airplanes
HARRISBURG — A bill to exempt the purchase and maintenance of airplanes from Pennsylvania's 6 percent sales tax won a strong vote of confidence in the state House of Representatives.
-
State lawmakers consider takeover of struggling school districts
HARRISBURG — A Republican-penned bill that would pave the way for state takeovers of Pennsylvania school districts veering toward financial collapse has the support of Gov. Tom Corbett and is advancing in the Legislature.
-
Take Me Home: Yip
Yip is a young dog, best guess is Bichon/Daschund. He is friendly and loves everyone, especially anyone who will rub his belly or let him on their lap for some doggie kisses. He enjoys car rides, has done well around other dogs, cats, and kids. Housebreaking and crate training are in the works.
-
Joe Paterno earned $13.4 million pension at Penn State
STATE COLLEGE — Joe Paterno earned a state pension of $13.4 million for his 61-year coaching career at Penn State.
-
Police Log 05.22.12
A roundup of police news reported by departments across the Central Susquehanna Valley.
-
Montour County judge dismisses flooding lawsuit
DANVILLE — A Montour County judge has dismissed a case brought against Mahoning Township by residents of the Gaytowne subdivision.
- More News Headlines
-



