Regional News

Falsely reporting an active shooter is on track to become a felony in Colorado

Senate Bill 249 comes in response to an increase in fake reports
Police responded to Durango High School in May 2015 after a report of someone pointing a gun at a driver near the school. (Durango Herald file)
Feb 22, 2023
Police sweep Durango High School, determine there is no threat

As the legitimate threat of mass violence has risen across the country, so too have fictitious reports of active shooters, causing unnecessary panic, lockdowns and police response.

In February, more than a dozen schools across Colorado, including Durango, were targeted with fake reports from someone who claimed they were about to begin a violent attack, forcing districts to cancel classes and unsettling communities from Boulder to Aspen to Cañon City. In Estes Park, a responding officer accidentally fired his gun.

Colorado lawmakers have responded with a bill that would make falsely reporting a mass shooting a Class 6 felony, punishable by up to 18 months in prison and a fine of up to $100,000.

Rep. Gabe Evans, a Fort Lupton Republican and a prime sponsor of the bill, said that even though no one was hurt because of the false reports, there were still serious ramifications. “Were there thousands of taxpayer dollars wasted and an enormous amount of emotional and psychological trauma imposed on our teachers, on our staff, on our students, on our families and ultimately, our communities? Absolutely,” he said.

A 2018 law already outlaws false reports of imminent threats to public safety such as bomb threats. But Senate Bill 249 would update Colorado’s law to include false reports of mass shootings or an active shooter. It also expands the definition of false reporting of an emergency to include when a threat causes a shelter-in-place order.

The bill is bipartisan. The other prime sponsors are Sen. Jeff Bridges, D-Greenwood Village, Sen. Kevin Van Winkle, R-Highlands Ranch, and Rep. Barbara McLachlan, D-Durango.

“Fortunately, people don’t really call in bomb threats anymore,” Bridges said in a committee hearing earlier this month. “Unfortunately, what they do is they call in active shooter threats. Active shooter threats are sort of today’s bomb threat.”

If approved, the bill isn’t expected to result in many more criminal cases, according to a fiscal note prepared for the measure by nonpartisan legislative analysts. That’s because similar crimes of false reporting seldom result in convictions.

Only 21 people have been convicted in Colorado since 2019 for the false reporting of explosives or weapons, according to the fiscal note.

“Online crimes are incredibly hard to track,” said Evans, a former police officer, “and district attorneys, cops have limited resources.”

Making the crime a felony would help boost the amount of resources dedicated to these investigations, Evans said.

Colorado has had more than 60 “major swatting incidents” since January 2022 with about 40 of them this year, according to the Colorado Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Management. Swatting is a term used to describe when someone makes a prank call to law enforcement that prompts a swarm of armed police officers to respond to a location.

The department said schools are most often the targets of the hoax threats.

The measure also adds false reporting of an emergency when it is bias-motivated, also known as a hate crime, to the offenses that fall under Colorado’s Victim Rights Act.

The bill is supported by the Colorado District Attorneys’ Council, the Colorado Municipal League, Colorado Springs, several law enforcement organizations and the Colorado Rural Schools Alliance. The Colorado Criminal Defense Bar is the only group lobbying against the measure.

“This bill seems to be aimed squarely at a situation where there is no death, no injury but fear and trauma,” said Tristan Gorman, policy director for the Colorado Criminal Defense Bar. “This will further criminalize minors.”

The FBI, which is investigating the string of threats made against Colorado schools in February, said it has nothing new to share on the case.

The bill was unanimously approved by the Senate Judiciary Committee and by the full Senate. It’s expected to next be heard by the House Education Committee. No hearing date has been set.

The Colorado Sun is a reader-supported, nonpartisan news organization dedicated to covering Colorado issues. To learn more, go to coloradosun.com.