Von I. Meyer, 60, of Cedar Lake, Ind., is seen in an undated photo provided by the Lake County Sheriff's Department.(Photo: AP)
INDIANAPOLIS -- A northern Indiana
police chief said Sunday he believes a man arrested after allegedly
threatening to "kill as many people as he could" at a school was just
bluffing when he made the ominous remark during a heated argument with
his wife.
Interim Cedar Lake Police Chief Jerry Smith said Von I.
Meyer, 60, was arguing early Friday morning with his wife and initially
threatened to set her on fire while she was sleeping at their home.
Meyer,
who was arrested Saturday on seven felony charges, then told his wife
he would kill her "at the school" and "would kill as many people as he
could before police could stop him police," Smith said.
Meyer's
wife works at the cafeteria at Jane Ball Elementary School, less than
1,000 feet from the couple's home in Cedar Lake, about 45 miles
southeast of Chicago.
Smith said Meyer's wife stayed away from
that school Friday and police boosted security at the elementary school
and three other area schools as a precaution, taking those steps before
26 people, including 20 students, were shot and killed at an elementary
school in Newtown, Conn.
"We just didn't want to take any chances," he said of the extra security at the schools.
Although
police found 47 guns and ammunition hidden throughout Meyer's two-story
home after they arrested him, Smith said most of those weapons were
antique collector guns and he believes Meyer was not serious about his
school threat.
He said Meyer's wife told officers their relationship was turbulent and he had often threatened her.
"If
people followed through on all the threats they've ever made - things
said in anger that they don't really mean and regret - our population in
this country would be half of what it is," he said. "This was something
he said in the heat of an argument. He hadn't been plotting this."
Meyer
fled his home early Friday after his wife reported the alleged threats
to police, and he may have gone into hiding in a densely wooded area
around his home, Smith said.
Police watched the house, but Meyer
apparently slipped back into his home at some point. He was arrested
there without incident Saturday on felony intimidation, resisting law
enforcement and domestic battery charges.
Meyer remained jailed
Sunday without bond at the Lake County Jail, pending an initial hearing
on the charges. It wasn't clear Sunday whether he had an attorney yet.
Police
initially said Meyer was "a known member of the Invaders Motorcycle
Gang," but Smith said Sunday evening Meyer is not an active member of
that group, although he was affiliated with it in his youth.
Smith
said security would remain high at the area's school in the coming
days, mostly because of the heightened concerns nationwide in the wake
of the deadly shooting rampage in Connecticut.
"One of your greatest fears is that someone might try to be a copycat," he said.
Asssociated Press