A frightening phone call triggered an immediate law enforcement response at two Boyd County schools Friday morning, after a man allegedly threatened to retrieve a gun and go to Boyd County Middle School and Ashland Middle School.
According to Ashland Police Department, the call was received at the Ashland Water Treatment Plant and quickly reported to authorities. Officers coordinated within seconds with Boyd County Sheriff’s Office, activating safety protocols at both schools.
Officers Already in Place
Both schools already had School Resource Officers (SROs) on campus at the time of the call. Those officers were immediately notified, and additional police units arrived within seconds to secure the buildings and protect students and staff.
Police say there were no credible or physical threats found at either school. Officers remained on scene out of an abundance of caution while the investigation continued.
Call Linked to Swatting Incident in Texas
Detectives quickly traced the phone number used in the Ashland threat and determined it was connected to a similar swatting call reported in Texas earlier this month. That discovery reinforced investigators’ belief that this was a deliberate hoax rather than a real attack.
Authorities emphasized that the rapid response prevented panic and ensured student safety, crediting the presence of trained SROs and strong coordination between law enforcement agencies and school officials.
What Is “Swatting” — and Why It’s Increasing
Swatting is a dangerous hoax in which someone makes a false report of an active shooter, bomb threat, or other violent crime to provoke a heavy police response. These calls often target schools, government buildings, or workplaces and can originate from anywhere in the country — or even overseas — using spoofed or masked phone numbers.
Across the U.S., law enforcement agencies have reported a sharp increase in swatting incidents aimed at:
- Schools and school districts
- Public utilities and government offices
- Judges, journalists, and public officials
While many calls turn out to be fake, police must treat every threat as real — diverting emergency resources, disrupting schools, and putting officers and the public at risk.
Officials Stress Vigilance, Not Panic
Both APD and the Boyd County Sheriff’s Office stressed that safety remains their top priority and that investigators will continue following all leads to identify the caller responsible.
They also thanked school officials and SROs for their swift action, noting that the response demonstrated why trained officers and close partnerships between schools and law enforcement matter — especially as swatting incidents continue to rise nationwide.
Authorities urge the public to report suspicious activity immediately but caution against spreading rumors or unverified information during active investigations.
As this case shows, even a single phone call can shut down schools and mobilize multiple agencies — a sobering reminder of how disruptive and dangerous swatting hoaxes have become across the country.















































































