ROANOKE TIMES Copyright (c) 1996, Roanoke Times DATE: Sunday, November 3, 1996 TAG: 9611040035 SECTION: VIRGINIA PAGE: B-1 EDITION: METRO DATELINE: VIRGINIA BEACH
A 12-year-old Princess Anne Middle School student stole a classmate's Halloween candy early Friday, then embarked on a one-kid crime wave that ended when a judge threw the fifth-grader into a juvenile detention facility, police said.
By Friday afternoon, the student had been charged with punching his classmate, stealing from the assistant principal, carrying a concealed weapon, and threatening to bomb the school.
``This is a sad state of affairs,'' police spokesman Lou Thurston said. ``Here's a nice guy, offering some candy to a classmate, and then the classmate steals all the candy from him. When the nice guy tells the bus driver, the nice guy gets assaulted.''
The crime wave began about 8 a.m. on the school bus, Thurston said.
Here is what happened, Thurston said:
The unruly student was offered a piece of the Halloween candy by his classmate but swiped the whole bag instead. When the classmate complained to the bus driver, the candy thief punched the classmate.
The bus pulled up to the school and the thief dashed out. The assistant principal chased him down.
The assistant principal called for the police officer assigned to patrol the middle school.
While the assistant principal and the officer were talking about what to do with the student, the student rifled through the assistant principal's desk. He stole a utility-type pocket knife and office materials.
The police officer arrested the fifth-grader. On the way out of the school, the boy threatened to blow up the building.
A search of the student's backpack turned up the stolen pocket knife and a steak knife. Police then found a cap pistol in the 12-year-old's shirt pocket.
The student, whose name was withheld because of his age, was charged with assault, larceny, carrying a concealed weapon and threatening to bomb a building. He wasn't charged with bringing a gun to school because the cap pistol doesn't qualify as a firearm under the state code, Thurston said.
A Juvenile Court judge sent the boy to the Tidewater Detention Home.
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