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SHOCKING footage shows the moment an 11-year-old boy accused of threatening to shoot up a school is “perp walked” by cops after revealing his chilling arsenal.
Carlo ‘Kingston’ Dorelli was seen being led into a cell in handcuffs after allegedly bragging about his “kill list” and plotting attacks on two schools.
The schoolboy from Port Orange, Florida, is pictured in his mugshot after police at Volusia County Sheriff’s Office said they wanted to make an example of him.
Cops say they charged the 11-year-old with making a written threat of a mass shooting after he allegedly said he would shoot up either his school, Creekside Middle, or nearby Silver Sands.
Authorities said they received a tip from other students that Dorelli had flaunted his terrifying weapons stock in a FaceTime call, as well as a list of targets.
The students said it wasn’t clear if the weapons were real or fake.
A search of the boy’s room turned up several airsoft rifles, fake ammo, swords, knives, and throwing stars.
They also found a list of names written down with possible stab marks next to them, which they allege were Dorelli’s potential targets.
Writing on Facebook, Sheriff Mike Chitwood said: “He had written a list of names and targets. He said it was all a joke.”
In an astonishing rant on camera, Chitwood later said he would post the mugshot of anyone who makes a school shooting threat, whatever their age.
“Since parents, you don’t want to raise your kids, I’m going to start raising them,” he said.
“Every time we make an arrest, your kid’s photo is going to be put out there. And if I can do it, I’m going to perp walk your kid so that everybody can see what your kid’s up to.”
He went on: “For the little b******s out there who think this is funny, ha ha ha, you want to get on social media, you ain’t that smart. You’re getting caught.”
The video then pans across a conference table covered in weapons which cops say Dorelli was “showing off” to other students.
Later, the boy is seen being taken out of a squad car and led in handcuffs into a secure facility.
He wears a blue flannel button-down shirt, black sweatpants, and sandals.
“Right this way, young man,” an officer tells the boy at one point, as he leads him into an empty cell with his hands shackled behind his back.
Before bolting the door, he asks Dorelli if he has “any questions,” to which the boy replies “No sir.”
The stunt has sparked controversy in Florida, where juvenile court records are normally exempt from public release, except in cases where the child is charged with a felony, as in this instance.
It follows a string of threats against teachers and students across Florida since the start of the school year.
In Broward County, the scene of America’s deadliest high school shooting in 2018, when 17 were killed, authorities have arrested nine students for making threats since August.
“Nothing about this is a laughing or joking matter,” Broward Sheriff Gregory Tony said at a press conference. “Parents, students, it’s not a game.”