Police Chief Thomas Mulcahy reports that the Concord Police Department and its public-safety partners responded to an alleged act of “swatting” on Tuesday.
At about 10:15 a.m. on Tuesday, Feb. 14, Concord Public Safety Communications received a 911 threatening call from a male reporting there was an active shooter with weapons on the grounds of Middlesex School on Lowell Road.
The Concord Police Department immediately responded to the school, implementing established policies and procedures, which included requesting a significant mutual aid police and emergency response, and a lockdown of the school.
Police from the Acton, Carlisle, Lexington, and Lincoln Police Departments, and responders from the Concord Fire Department were on scene within minutes.
Concord Police and its partner agencies conducted a comprehensive search of the school campus, including buildings and dormitories, and the surrounding neighborhood and turned up no threats.
“We are thankful this was not an actual threat or danger to the school or its community. Calls like the one we received today take valuable resources away from other potential emergency responses,” Chief Mulcahy said. “Our officers train for these types of events, and we are thankful that these threats were ultimately unfounded. As a department we are pleased that our training has us well-prepared for incidents such as this.”
Chief Mulcahy and the Concord Police Department wish to express their gratitude to all responding agencies for their swift and professional response, and thank the Middlesex School for its coordination and collaboration during this incident.
“Swatting,” according to Oxford Language is “the action or practice of making a prank call to emergency services in an attempt to bring about the dispatch of a large number of armed police officers to a particular address.” The phrase entered the dictionary in 2015 and has been recognized as a criminal phenomenon by the FBI since at least 2008.
The incident remains under active investigation by the Concord Police Department, which is attempting to determine the source of the call.
Concord Police have been in communication with state and federal law enforcement agencies, which are investigating a series of incidents targeting communities around the Commonwealth this week.