Three teens have been charged following a series of bomb threats at Orange High School.
Juvenile prosecutor Michael Horn said that three male students two 16-year-olds and one 17-year-old has been arrested.
In November, school officials canceled class several times because of the sophisticated emails threats. Police and the FBI searched the building on multiple occasions, but found nothing.
When classes finally resumed, there was a heavy police presence and students were not permitted to carry large backpacks, ONN's affiliate WEWS reported.
According to Horn, the students were charged with 17 felony counts of inducing panic, two misdemeanor counts of telecommunications harassment and one felony count of possessing criminal tools. Horn said that the boys sent emails to a site that made them untraceable, but a search a one of the teens' house produced evidence.
The FBI served a search warrant at a house on West Orange Hill Circle in Pepper Pike in early December.
Horn said that it is possible that the boys could be tried as adults. They could get anywhere from probation to one year in a detention facility, if convicted.
Horn said that the teens did it to see if they could do it.
No court date has been set and they are not in a detention center at this time.
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