BARTLESVILLE, Oklahoma -
Bartlesville Public Schools were closed Wednesday over what the district called "credible reports of a threat."
School leaders said the decision was made after someone saw a man with a gun not far from the high school Tuesday afternoon.
Police have not found that man or any evidence of an actual threat, but, as a precaution, 6,000 students stayed home Wednesday.
No one heard shots and there's no indication children were ever in danger, but despite that, classes were called off, starting Christmas break a day early.
Read the website notice.
Police officers were all around Bartlesville High School Wednesday, even though the building was closed.
They continued to check a report that two men, one of them with rifle
or shotgun, were spotted Tuesday behind the school, beyond the practice
fields in a wooded area near the Pathfinder Trail.
The men got into an SUV, which was picked up on a school surveillance camera.
The police have not determined who was in the truck or what they were doing.
"There has been no new threats made to the school. This is what we
would typically consider a suspicious incident, but until we locate
these two subjects and find out exactly what they were doing, we take it
seriously," said Bartlesville Police Captain Jay Hastings.
School officials and police said, without knowing if there was an actual threat, they chose the most cautious route.
"And our local police promised a lot of police presence today, even
more than we've had the last few days, but even with that, we were
fearful that something could happen to our students and we weren't
willing to take that risk today," said Superintendent Gary Quinn.
12/18/2012 Related Story: Documents Describe Items Found In Home Of Bartlesville School Threat Suspect
The fear is amplified after the arrest last week of 18-year-old
Sammie Chavez, who police say was planning to attack students at
Bartlesville High, and after last Friday's tragic shooting at Sandy Hook
Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut.
Warren Collier is the father of a 6th grader, and he was happy with the decision to cancel classes.
"It may be nothing, because of where the property is located. The
river is back there and maybe they were just hunting, but it does
concern me," Collier said.
The police patrols and investigation will continue, but in the
meantime even a basketball game planned for Friday has been postponed.
And the superintendent said he hoped things would get back to normal
for the restart of classes January 2nd. But police said there will be
more officers at the school regardless.