Schools in Los Angeles closed due to terror threat

District is second largest in US, with 640,000 students

A police officer puts up yellow tape to close the school outside of Edward Roybal High School in Los Angeles: Schools across  Los Angeles  were been ordered to close after  an emailed bomb  threat. Photograph: Richard Vogel/EPA
A police officer puts up yellow tape to close the school outside of Edward Roybal High School in Los Angeles: Schools across Los Angeles were been ordered to close after an emailed bomb threat. Photograph: Richard Vogel/EPA

All schools in the Los Angeles Unified School District were ordered to close and students were sent home after what was described as a “credible terror threat” by school district officials and police was received.

School district spokeswoman Ellen Morgan announced the closure on Tuesday but released no further details ahead of a press conference at district headquarters.

The electronically sent bomb threat was linked to an internet address in Frankfurt, Germany, a spokeswoman for the school district said. Los Angeles school district spokeswoman Shannon Haber said the threat was sent via email to a district board member and came through an internet protocol, or IP, address from the German city. The threat was sent to a number of schools.

The district, the second largest in the US, has 640,000 students in kindergarten through to 12th grade, more than 900 schools and a total of 187 public charter schools.

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The district spans 1,150sq km (720sq m) including Los Angeles and all or part of more than 30 smaller cities.