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VIDEO: Super Creepy School Lockdown HORROR Stories!

Because of recent events and shootings in schools, every school has tried to go with drill and actual lockdowns in case of emergencies that seem to be potentially harmful to the students and teachers.

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Sure, every time that a school is on lockdown things are pretty scary, even if it turns out to be nothing. But in the video you get to hear about three times things actually got quite creepy when the kids were on lockdown.

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According to syracuse.com, students were in their first-period class at Cazenovia High School when the vice principal’s voice came over the loudspeaker telling everyone the school was going into a lockdown.

“You could tell from her voice she was serious,” said senior Jack Nardella, who was in government class when the announcement came over about 8:15 a.m. “She told us we had to go into a lockdown, and that it was not a joke.”

It was the first lockdown for the Cazenovia school district, and for many it stirred images of school shootings such as at Sandy Hook and Columbine.

The school fell absolutely silent for a moment. Then teachers rushed to lock classroom doors; students huddled in corners of classrooms away from doors and windows. In some classrooms, students hid in closets.

Some teachers pushed desks in front of the doors to block anyone from entering. In one case, a teacher guarded the door with a pair of scissors.

This is what happens today when a school faces the possibility that a person with a gun is loose in a building. In this case, the lockdown was triggered by bullets found in a hallway. No shooter was found and, by the accounts of many people involved, the school handled the situation well, but it was still a scary time for many students, staff and parents.

As the 21/2-hour lockdown in Cazenovia started on April 4 in the middle and high schools, no one knew exactly what was happening, students said. (The middle school is connected to the high school.) Nearly 1,000 students attend the schools located just off the main road through the small Madison County village.

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For the most part, students were quiet, but in some classes some students cried. Students in some classes held hands and whispered to each other things would be OK, trying to comfort those who were shaken.

Students interviewed didn’t recall hearing sirens, but from time to time they could hear footsteps in the hallways. That made students “even more tense, nervous and scared,” one student said, because they didn’t know who was right outside their classroom. Some texted their parents to tell them there was a lockdown but they were OK.

School authorities didn’t know how dangerous the situation was at first. When a principal went to find the bullets, they were gone.

The superintendent said he suspected after a short time that the situation wasn’t dangerous, but he called the lockdown because he felt they had to make sure students and staff were safe.

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