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To: RDTF
School bus thefts raise security concerns

08:01 AM CDT on Tuesday, August 28, 2007
By Jeff McShan / 11 News

Jeff McShan's 11 News report The Houston Police Department's Criminal Intelligence Division, the FBI and the Harris County Sheriff's Office are all concerned about a large number of school buses that have been stolen in the Houston area over the last several months.

Seventeen large, yellow school buses were stolen recently from various charter schools, business schools and private bus companies. Not one has disappeared from HISD.

Most, if not all, were taken from locations on Houston’s north side. One off west Tidwell, another from the Lopez bus company off Melrose and Berry streets.

Timothy Williams is the superintendent at the High School for Business.

“We were going to park them over there inside the gate. Until we could get a gate around the facility, but we really didn't think that was going to be a problem,” said the charter school’s superintendent.

While it is important to point out that there is no known threat, HPD's Criminal Intelligence Division mentioned in a recent e-mail that these school bus thefts are a homeland security concern.

One detective said a bus may have been stolen and taken across the border to Mexico.

Nevertheless, since the Sept. 11 attacks the thought of terrorists targeting children has certainly been discussed by the Department of Homeland Security. And that is why finding out what happened to these buses is very important.

Published reports in 2004 said that the U.S. military found information in Iraq pertaining to U.S. schools.

Reportedly, there have been hundreds of thefts of school bus radios in the United States.

With all that being said, 11 News was reminded Monday by law enforcement officials that school buses remain one of the safest ways to get to and from school. In fact, nationwide, school buses transport nearly 24 million kids to school daily.

And bus drivers all around the country are being trained regularly to look out for suspicious people and activities.

27 posted on 08/28/2007 7:10:33 AM PDT by blam (Secure the border and enforce the law)
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To: blam
School buses are definately a soft target, but lack the dramatic. Bus drivers have too much control to make takeover very easy, they see any men approaching and they drive off, lots of stops have parents watching. AQ might get a bus or two, but no wide scale multi-takeovers.

AQ knows that any move means the entire operation is compromised, they know what happened to Flight 93.

AQ likes things that go bang that are jihadist crowd pleasers, that will increase recruiting.

Killing kids won't have the effect of turning a ferry with thousands of passengers into a fireball.

Think about the disruption and future fright to passengers if a ferry got hit. Kids have to take the school bus, business as normal the next day. Ferry riders are highly productive, in the case of the Staten Island ferries, many Jewish passengers, making a ferry attack much more destructive to our economy.

30 posted on 08/28/2007 9:54:28 AM PDT by gandalftb (mps)
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