Four teens accused of spray painting obscenities, racial slurs at Langham Creek HS

Trevor Kimble is charged with graffiti at an educational facility in a June 5, 2014, incident at Langham Creek High School. Photo: Harris County Sheriff's Office Trevor Kimble is charged with graffiti at an educational facility in a June 5, 2014, incident at Langham Creek High School. Photo: Harris County Sheriff's Office Image 1 of / 6 Caption Close Four teens accused of spray painting obscenities, racial slurs at Langham Creek HS 1 / 6 Back to Gallery

Four seniors at Langham Creek High School are accused of spray painting obscenities and racial slurs on school windows the night before the senior breakfast.

Sharif Al-Droubi, 17, and Troy Brymer, Trevor Kimble and Courtland Pelt, all 18, painted obscene words, racial slurs, sexually explicit drawings and other graffiti on the cafeteria windows about 12:20 a.m. Thursday, according to law enforcement records.

The four were apparently caught on surveillance video climbing onto the school roof.

Pelt told a school official the four had talked about spray painting the windows as a prank.

"He said they knew the seniors would be having their breakfast and it would be funny for the windows to be painted," Assistant Principal Tim Silvey said in a court document.

A student who was not involved in the incident told school district police that Al-Droubi had said he wanted to spray paint an obscene racial slur on the cafeteria windows at the school, 17610 FM 529 in northwest Harris County.

It is in the Cypress-Fairbanks Independent School District.

Assistant Principal Scott Tucker spoke with Al-Droubi, who initially denied involvement, records state.

Al-Droubi told Tucker he spent the night at Pelt's house, along with Pelt, Kimble and Brymer.

He said the four ate breakfast at Pelt's house and skipped the senior event at school.

Pelt's mother told Silvey that the teens had spent the night at her house. When she saw a surveillance video of four young men climbing onto the school roof, however, she identified them as her son and the three friends who had been at her house overnight.

Pelt told Silvey the four drove to the school area, parked at a business and walked to the school.

Pelt said the four climbed on the roof and Al-Droubi instructed them to paint individual letters in window panes, according to the document.

Pelt also told authorities they put all the spray cans in a blue bag with a draw string and threw it in a ditch behind a fitness center next to the school, records state.

The four are free on $2,000 bail.