Indiana teacher allegedly made ‘kill list’ that included 5th grader, staff members

An Indiana college trainer was detained after telling one among her college students that they had been on her “kill listing,” which included different college students and faculty workers members, police stated.

A fifth-grade scholar at St. Stanislaus Faculty in East Chicago went to a counselor on Wednesday after they overheard their trainer talk about killing herself, college students and different workers members.

The trainer, 25-year-old Angelica Carrasquillo-Torres, allegedly instructed the scholar that they had been on the underside of her listing, in accordance with the East Chicago Police Division.

Carrasquillo-Torres was instantly escorted by college workers to the college principal’s workplace, the place she admitted to creating the statements to the scholar and confirmed she did have a “kill listing,” however didn't present it, cops stated.

The principal then suggested the trainer to depart the college and never return, police stated.

“We had been knowledgeable of a regarding report from a scholar concerning feedback made by the scholar’s trainer,”  St. Stanislaus principal Angelica Foy instructed the college group in an e-mail, obtained by WGN.

“The trainer was instantly faraway from the classroom and detained [while] we investigated the incident. After college students had been safely dismissed, the trainer was escorted off campus and we notified the police. 

Police stated they had been made conscious of the incident after Carrasquillo-Torres left the college — 4 hours after the incident — and accomplished a report for the Prison Investigation Division upon notification. 

Carrasquillo-Torres was taken into custody round 11:15 a.m. on Thursday morning at her dwelling in Griffith, cops stated. No fees towards the trainer have been introduced as police proceed to research.

Following the incident, the college introduced it could be holding digital lessons solely on Friday. Counselors have additionally been made obtainable for college students and workers.

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