BREAKING: Arrest Made, They Finally Captured Him

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As lawless anarchy continues to spread across America with a school massacre in California this week, Colorado police actually made an arrest in a similar case. Even better, they promise more to come. In mid-November, six students were used for target practice in the park across from Aurora Central High School. It started as a drive by shooting and apparently escalated into a gun battle, as the intended victims returned fire.

One arrest, so far

A Colorado teenager is actually in custody, under arrest on charges related to the November 15 shooting at Nome park in Aurora. Media aren’t exactly spelling it out but local rival gangs appear to be having a dispute.

The park drive-by was “the first of two incidents involving gunfire near Aurora schools in less than a week.” Three more students were shot in the second incident of gun play.

They aren’t releasing the name of the 15-year-old boy Aurora Police Department has under arrest, because he’s a minor, but he “is being held on suspicion of first-degree attempted murder.

They rounded him up Monday after his name came back attached to the “Chrysler 300 associated with the shooting.” As soon as they turned the hot lights on him he spilled his guts.

“This is just the beginning of arrests!” Aurora police Chief Vanessa Wilson posted on social media. “If you were involved, we are coming for you.” They expect to arrest everyone he names as passengers in his car that afternoon and see what they have to say.

The four boys, ages 14, 16, 17 and 18 and two girls, ages 15 and 16, who were blasted while hanging out at Nome Park, across from the school at 1:00 p.m. that fateful afternoon “are expected to survive.”

It happens all the time

According to Aurora Central ninth graders Dakota Newland and Taniyah Moore, they are “used to hearing gunshots near the school. It’s just the area. It’s the area and the people that live around it.” What is a surprise is an arrest over it.

Sending people to jail is still an entirely different matter. Folks aren’t holding their breath over the prosecutions.

From the way their first suspect babbled to save his own skin, detectives “believe there were at least two other people involved in the shooting and are searching for answers.”

They also recognize that in these defunded days of anti-police sentiment, any vigilant citizen who wants to give them a hand is welcome. They outsourced their law enforcement duties to the public by offering $7,000 in cold hard cash for getting the job done for them. They don’t want you to arrest anyone yourself, just tell them were to make the pickup.

The second incident the same week seems to be a retaliation. Three “other children were injured in a shooting in the parking lot of Hinkley High School.” Only two of the victims were students there, the third attends APS Avenues. In that case the police already made the arrest of three shooters but they can’t tie the two events together, even though they do admit “the Hinkley shooting had ties to a local gang.” While they can’t verify the connection, Chief Vanessa Wilson notes “the shootings happened after an apparent fight.”

She also “pleaded with parents to stay aware of their children’s activity online because of suspicions they may be able to acquire guns through social media.” Police are begging parents to disarm their teens. “I need the parents to get involved, I Need you checking phones, I need you checking rooms, I need you checking cars and making sure they’re taking these guns away from kids.”