That certainly sounds bad, but it's all relative; keep in mind this school is in Baltimore County, which is distinct from the City of Baltimore and has a much different crime profile. This school is in the exact same town as Eastern Tech, literally the top high school in Maryland.
Hi, I'm not following the point being made.
I skimmed through all the articles linked in GP and finding them pretty relevant to whatever decision might have been made to utilize the AI system (not at all to comment on how badly the bad tip was acted on).
Hailing from and still living in N. California, you could tell me that this school is located in Beverly Hills or Melrose Place, and it would still strike me as a piece of trivia. If anything, it'd just be ironic?
For context, Baltimore (City) is one of the most dangerous large cities in the US. Between the article calling the school "Kenwood High School in Baltimore" and the GP's crime links, a casual reader could mistakenly picture a dangerous inner-city school. But in reality it's located in a low-rise suburb in the County. Granted, it's an inner-ring blue collar suburb, but it's still a night-and-day difference from the worst neighborhoods in the city. And the schools in those bad neighborhoods tend to have far worse crimes than what was listed above.
So my point was that while the list of incidents is definitely not great, it's still way less severe than many inner-city schools in Baltimore. And honestly these same types of incidents happen at many "safe" large suburban high schools in "nice" areas throughout the US... generally less often than at this particular school, but not an order-of-magnitude difference.
Basically, I'm saying that GP's assertion of it being a "dangerous school" is entirely relative to what you're comparing to. There are much worse schools in that metro area.