Automated voicemails left at high schools around Wyoming threatening to detonate bombs and shoot up the school are a hoax that originated outside the country and pose no credible threat, multiple law enforcement agencies report.
That doesnât mean theyâre harmless or that theyâre not taken seriously, said Chance Walkama, chief deputy of operations for the Laramie County Sheriffâs Office.
âThere are people out there trying to disrupt our lives, and itâs very disturbing,â he told Cowboy State Daily. âItâs to disrupt and scare and to create panic. We can never not take these threats seriously.â
In Laramie County, Burns Jr./Sr. High School and Pine Bluffs High were targeted, the local school district reports.
Although it was apparent fairly quickly that the threat wasnât credible, the LCSO cleared the schools with a K-9, he said.
âRight away we were able to determine this was an out-of-the-country individual, and the call did not originate from our country,â Walkama said.
He said the caller, who left the voicemail late Tuesday night for school personnel to find Wednesday morning, had a voice that sounded computer-generated and foreign.
âIt was one of those voicemails with a foreign accent and a robotic voice cover,â Walkama said.
The Threat
The voice said a bomb had been placed somewhere in the school and that if anyone reported it to police or tried to find the device, âthereâs going to be a negative action,â Walkama said.
That negative action apparently was a threat of a school shooting, according to the Platte County Sheriffâs Office, which reported the same threat was made at Wheatland High School.
âA voicemail was left at 11:55 p.m. (Tuesday) from an apparent computer-generated foreign voice stating there were bombs placed in the school and they were scheduled to detonate at 1 p.m.,â the sheriffâs office reports. âThe caller further states that if the bombs are moved, they would come shoot up the school.â
The LCSO also responded to assist the Platte County Sheriffâs Office with K-9 units to sweep Wheatland High School and a nearby elementary.
As in Lincoln County, the Platte County Sheriffâs Office deployed deputies and K-9 units to sweep Wheatland high and a nearby elementary school. While that was going on, students at both schools were put on lockdown.
âThere is no reason to believe that the physical safety of any student or staff was ever in danger,â the PCSO reports.
The message left at Wheatland High âwould be consistentâ with the threat at the Laramie County schools, Walkama said.
Along with sweeping schools with K-9 units, surveillance cameras were also checked from the time school let out Tuesday until people arrived Wednesday, and it was determined nobody had been in or around the building, he said.
âImmediately Deemed Not Credibleâ
The robotic out-of-the-country call also was reported to have been left at Upton High School, Worland High, Ten Sleep School, Saratoga High, and multiple other schools throughout Carbon County.
Itâs likely whoever initiated the threats used a list of phone numbers for Wyoming high schools, Walkama said.
With the technology to create fake voices and use a computer to call from anywhere in the world, these types of threats are showing up more often, he said.
âWeâve had a lot of them, and theyâre pretty much immediately deemed not credible,â he said. âWeâre able to do that quickly.â
Even so, theyâre always checked out to be sure.
âWe do worry about the information, how itâs received, and how itâs causing folks to be concerned,â Walkama said. âWe probably deal with these about three or four times a year, and weâre on track for that.â
Itâs difficult to pinpoint who exactly makes these threats, he said, because they originate far outside the reach of local law enforcement. Theyâre reported to Homeland Security.
There also is a heightened law enforcement presence at and around schools for the rest of the week, Walkama said.
âPeople will see that increased presence because we do always want to be sure,â he said.
Greg Johnson can be reached at greg@cowboystatedaily.com.





