Beth Sherard-hutcheson Times1reporter@gmail.com
Thursday, October 20, 2022
Once again, schools have become the target of a TikTok Challenge and not in a good way. Last year the school’s experienced strains of vandalism as students were challenged to photograph or video themselves vandalizing school property. The new challenge – “swatting” – goes even further. Swatting is when a person makes 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. On Thursday, Oct. 13 at least five schools were targeted – Watertown High School, Brookings High School, Mitchell Senior High School, Rapid City High School and Lincoln High School (in Sioux Falls). Because of these prank calls, law enforcement officials surrounded and swept through the school while students were told to shelter-in-place. During the week of Oct. 3, over two dozen schools in South Carolina also faced the same issue. While the immediate school districts haven’t been impacted, it’s still a cause for concern. “I am aware that this has been occurring,” Dakota Valley Superintendent Dr. Tonia Warzecha said. “We have an updated safety guide in place, and we will implement those protocols should this occur at Dakota Valley.” “At this time it has not impacted the EPJ district,” Elk Point-Jefferson Superintendent Philip Schonebaum said. “If it were to happen we would stick to previous trainings on intruder/ other items. Swatting is a serious crime and a perpetrator, if caught, can face jail time. The local authorities are aware of this harmful TikTok craze. I believe that the best defense for these types of things is education, from parents and school districts, on proper uses of social media.”