School administrators at John F. Kennedy Elementary School in Corpus Christi learned a student had a weapon on campus around 9 a.m., according to a letter sent to parents from West Oso Independent School District Superintendent Conrado Garcia.
The school went on lockdown immediately, and a Corpus Christi police officer on campus took the weapon and secured it, the letter detailed. The handgun was loaded, Corpus Christi Police Department said in a news release. Police and school officials did not say how the weapon was first discovered.
In the Corpus Christi case, investigators determined the gun belonged to the student’s parents, and police arrested the student’s 30-year-old father, who has been charged with making a firearm accessible to a child and abandoning or endangering a child, they said. Conviction on the latter charge carries up to two years in prison, police said.
The father was booked Wednesday evening into the Nueces County Jail, and bond information wasn’t immediately available, according to the jail. CNN couldn’t immediately determine if he has a lawyer.
“While we do not believe that students and staff were in any kind of imminent danger, as a precaution the campus had increased police presence and maintained a higher level of security at the school until the Corpus Christi Police Department gave us an ‘all clear’ at 10:30 am,” Garcia wrote to parents.
Corpus Christi police urged gun owners to ensure their weapons are properly secured and the check them frequently.
“We recommend that all guns are unloaded, trigger locked, and in a locked gun safe, or pistol box with the ammunition locked away separately,” police said in a news release. “Keys for the guns and ammunition should be located out of reach of children, away from the weapons and ammunition.”
CNN’s Julie In and Paradise Afshar contributed to this report.