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Shooting plot foiled at Fla. high school after one accomplice broke silence

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One was a freshman. The other a sophomore.

Orange County School Board Chairman Bill Sublette said students making threats against each other or teachers is not an "infrequent occurrence, unfortunately, in a urban school district with 185,000 students."

But mentally ill students concocting a hit list — "That's relatively rare," Sublette said. "Some are more serious and this one was very, very serious."

On Jan. 12, the Timber Creek High student and friend of the alleged conspirator making threats reported the text messages to their mother and showed her photos of the teen holding a firearm on Facebook, an Orange County Sheriff's Office report says.

The student who reported the plot said he or she talked often with the troubled boy and knew about his suicidal thoughts.

Deputies met with the two alleged plotters, who admitted to having voices tell them to do "really crazy stuff" and having problems in school with their group of classmates, ages 14 to 16.

One of them said he imagined himself jumping off an elevated pedestrian foot bridge he saw every day on the way to the bus stop to end his own life. He was tired of hearing the voices.

His parents told deputies they noticed their son's demeanor but it is unclear whether they sought help.

The other plotter said the voices had been haunting him since the sixth grade and he cut himself in response to their taunts. His first cut was on the inside of his upper thigh — where no one could see it.

He told deputies he lost his faith in God because the voices didn't go away. They also became more aggressive, the report indicates.

The boy planned to steal his father's semi-automatic rifle and pistol and together with his similarly disturbed accomplice, they would open fire on a specific group of students and random students.

They didn't tell their parents, fearing one or both would be sent away. Someone advised one of the boys "to think about other things and to do things he likes when he hears the voices."

Sheriff's Capt. Angelo Nieves wouldn't say how close the teens came to carrying out their depression-driven plot. He noted they never set foot on Timber Creek's campus with guns.

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