Microsoft Gamer Threatens School Shootings, Police Move Fast

December 18, 2007 (LPAC)--Maryland police put Frostburg State University in "lock-down" status last week after arresting, in hand-cuffs, a student who made an Internet threat of "shooting up the school."

The Times News reports that the 19 year old student, Allieu Shaw, had made the threat, telling other players through the audio connection of Microsoft’s internet first person shooter game, "Call of Duty 4". Another player alerted the police, who then searched, through Shaw's internet provider, for his address. They then got a search warrant, searched his room, finding no weapons. Shaw said "he was joking."

When Lyndon LaRouche was briefed on the arrest he said, "We've crossed two lines in this matter: one, the killers are getting more bold, recruitment is up, the sales of the killer videos are up; but two, the awareness is up - the police are reacting quicker than usual, showing that they have a greater sense of the threat."

"Call of Duty 4--Modern Warfare" is a game out of Cheney's box of Revolution in Military Affairs. The player is an American soldier in a squad on war-torn city streets. The player/soldier is a first person shooter, killing, hidden "insurgents" who yell out in a foreign language while they shoot at you from behind walls, cars and helicopters.