As a teacher, you SHOULD NOT release a student's name to the public concerning this incident. You can and probably will lose your job if you do so - and rightly so. Unless you know all the facts, you would be taking a knee-jerk action that could cause irreparable harm not only to your career, but, possibly to an innocent (or merely disturbed or stupid) student.
*IF* I go to the local paper about this, I would not use the student's name. I would explain the events and response to events surrounding "a student" at the school, just as I have here. I think people in the community should know that there is a student making these threats who is not being expelled. I would only take that step if the student isn't expelled, and if I felt there was no other way to promote the safety of the other students and staff. I feel very trapped because I feel that it is morally wrong to remain silent in the face of these threats. If the student acts on these threats and I knew about them and said nothing, I'm morally implicated. Maybe not legally, but morally. I don't have faith in my administrator doing the right thing; I have seen him make bad decisions over and over.
I asked my colleague, the one who was there for the second threat, to describe how it went. She said she had asked him to put away his phone, he was defiant, so she asked him to step outside, and as he exited the room he said, "I'm going to shoot this school up." When she confronted him about it in the hall, he denied it. At that point she took it to the teacher in charge and the student's main teacher, and the main teacher said the student had made the threat the previous day, and also said something about doing "mass murder." But the main teacher didn't take him seriously then and just gave him a warning, without informing anyone about what happened. The teacher in charge told him he should have taken it seriously and he should have informed him (the teacher in charge) when it happened. At that point the kid was sent home, but the next morning he returned to the school with a parent to meet with the principal. He was not, then, under suspension yet. Why not, I do not know, I don't know why he wasn't immediately suspended for at least three days--other students have been suspended for three days immediately when they threatened merely to hit someone. Anyway, after the meeting, which the police attended, he was suspended for five days, the maximum length of suspension, and the principal said they would be considering expulsion. The rest I've already covered here--basically the principal is talking like expulsion isn't going to happen.
The main teacher and the teacher in charge both don't think the kid would actually do it, so they aren't in favor of expulsion. My colleague who was there for the second threat does think he would act on it, and so does another teacher who used to have the student last year. The main teacher is basing his assumption that he wouldn't on the fact that he (the teacher) has worked with other students in the past who were more obvious hot heads who had shorter triggers and were more likely to lash out if angered. I don't think he takes into account that most school shootings are cold, premeditated acts. You only have to look at some of the videos school shooters have made before the massacres to see that they don't look like hot heads and they don't seem especially riled up and upset. This teacher is not a psychologist or a profiler and he has no expertise on determining whether a student is capable of mass murder or not. I really don't think it's appropriate to rely on his "gut feeling" about the student in making this decision.
What it comes down to for me is the student made the threat twice, both times saying directly that *he* wants to "shoot up the school." At this point I and several other teachers and staff are experiencing fear about him carrying it out, and we are afraid for the safety of students and staff and for our own safety. Even if the student would not act on his threats he has succeeded in creating an atmosphere of dread. To me, that's the definition of terrorism. I don't think it's right that my options, if the principal chooses not to recommend expulsion, are to work in an environment I feel is unsafe, without having the right to warn others, or to take an unpaid leave of absence. I don't see why the rights of a student who has made two direct threats trump the rights of the rest of the students and staff.
I don't think he has an IEP. I know how IEPs can complicate things, believe me. But at the staff meeting no one said, "Well, he has an IEP so..." as they would in other situations regarding students with IEPs.