Truly Fowl Prank

http://www.philly.com/philly/hp/news_update/15505006.html


85 hens close Phila. high school

By Sam Wood and Robert Moran
INQUIRER STAFF WRITERS
Who let the birds out?A fowl prank closed a Philadelphia high school today, canceling classes for 3,600 students.
Eighty-five "full-blown live chickens" - identified later today as Rhode Island Reds - were discovered roaming the halls of Northeast Philadelphia High School this morning as faculty arrived before dawn.
"They've created quite a mess," said Fernando Gallard, spokesman for the school district. "It's going to take us at least a day to clean up."
The flock was let into the school on Cottman Avenue over the weekend.
Now several agencies are involved in investigating the poultry prank: the Philadelphia School District, the Philadelphia Police, and the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture.
Video surveillance shows that multiple culprits gained entry into the school about 9:30 p.m. Sunday to release the hens and spread chicken feed on the floors, Gallard said.
Any break-in is supposed to trigger an alarm, but the caper was not discovered until 5 a.m. by a janitor, Gallard said. How the perpetrators got into the building and why the alarm apparently did not go off is still under investigation.
"We believe we're going to be ready for school tomorrow," Gallard said.
The birds were all taken to Fox Chase Farms in Philadelphia, where they are being cared for by staff of Swenson Arts and Technology High School, which operates vocational training programs in agricultural industries and environmental science.
Although the farm has a small poultry program, it is unclear what will happen to the Rhode Island Reds.
David Kipphut, principal at Swenson, said the hens have to be kept in isolation until their health can be assessed. The Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture is scheduled to inspect the flock tomorrow.
Kipphut said his goal is that the hens will "be returned to their rightful owner."
If not, Kipphut said, his goal is to have them adopted.
Who is behind the prank is still unknown but Kipphut said Philadelphia Police Department is reviewing the surveillance video.
"They let them loose and spread chicken feed all over the place to keep them fat and happy, I guess," Gallard said.
Happy enough to roost?
"I don't know if they laid eggs," Gallard said.
"They were so cute," said Joy Deltoro, a secretary in the college counseling office, who saw the birds in two wire crates before they were taken away.
"You had everybody laughing," she said of the reaction among other staffers. Deltoro said it was wrong to release the hens at the school, but, she added, "It's better than hearing about a shooting."
The invasion of poultry forced administrators to send most students home at 9 a.m., Gallard said. But special-education students were taken to Woodrow Wilson Middle School for a full day of classes.
Corina Oxford, 16, and her sister, Destiny, 14, arrived to school around 7:30 to find a longer-than-normal line of students trying to get in.
The sisters were then directed to the auditorium, where they sat and waited for at least an hour before being excused for the day.
They then spent a half-hour in the freezing cold waiting for their mother to pick them up.
They were both happy to have hens show up.
"It got us out of school," Destiny said.
"We don't know where the chickens (hens) came from or who they belong to," Gallard said earlier today. "I'm pretty sure there is a very upset poultry farmer somewhere who wants them back."
"It was an expensive prank. There's the lost staff hours, the police hours and the cost of cleanup," Gallard said.
Whoever is apprehended will have to pay a pretty hefty fine, Gallard said.
"It's not going to be chicken scratch," Gallard said.
The students will come back to roost tomorrow.



http://www.philly.com/philly/hp/news_update/20080212_Students__not_chickens__back_at_Phila__high_school.html

Students, not chickens, back at Phila. high school

By Robert Moran
INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
Classes resumed this morning at Northeast Philadelphia High School, a day after students were sent home after 85 chickens were discovered roaming the building without hall passes.Actually, they weren't supposed to be there at all. The incident appears to have been a prank - one that is now the subject of a police investigation.
"We're looking forward to a chicken-free day," said district spokesman Fernando Gallard.
Surveillance video shows four males entering the building at 9:30 p.m. Sunday, and the school building engineer discovered the first indication of the poultry liberation - a trail of what appeared to be sawdust - at 4:30 a.m. yesterday.
School officials cancelled school for 3,600 students so facility on Cottman Avenue could be scrubbed down with a solution of bleach and water.
The chickens were taken to Fox Chase Farms in Philadelphia, where they are being cared for by the staff of Swenson Arts and Technology High School, which operates agricultural programs.
A state inspector is scheduled to check the birds for illnesses.
Once cleared, some of the chickens will be kept at the districts two farms if they are not claimed by an owner, Gallard said.
"They're egg-laying hens, so we'd make sure to put them to use," Gallard said.
Because the district can't keep all 85 hens, the remainder would be given to other farmers, he said.




This was ALL OVER the radio today, on the front page of most of the papers, and there were also news bits at 5 and ten/eleven last night.
Wow.

Verileah 18 years ago
That's a pretty elaborate prank.

"They were so cute," said Joy Deltoro, a secretary in the college counseling office, who saw the birds in two wire crates before they were taken away.
"You had everybody laughing," she said of the reaction among other staffers. Deltoro said it was wrong to release the hens at the school, but, she added, "It's better than hearing about a shooting."


I agree with Deltoro. Sad that it'll probably be the tax payers who end up paying for that prank, but hard to complain too much.
Vishanti 18 years ago
Man, when I was a high school senior, someone suggested this as a class prank. It was shot down pretty quickly. One alternate suggestion was for everyone at graduation to hand an egg to the principal, with the final student giving him a live chicken. That was also met with a hearty round of disinterest. I don't even know if we ended up having a class prank at all, but if we did, it was largely unnoticed.
Lessa 18 years ago
I remember some of my friends stuck a frozen (storebought) chicken in another friends locker.. it was pretty funny at the time ( i forget after so long how the joke started) but that chicken was kicked around the hall for days after.. no clue why the janitors didnt toss it..