Portland police say five teens have been arrested in connection with vandalism at Roosevelt High School last month that caused nearly $600,000 worth of damage.

The teens were arrested at David Douglas High School on Oct 26, said Sgt. Pete Simpson, a police spokesman, who wasn't able to confirm whether the five students attended David Douglas.

A security camera captured some of the Oct. 15 incident at Roosevelt, which caused severe flooding and left several classrooms in a newly constructed part of the campus out of commission for the semester.

The damage estimate is now twice as high as an figure provided late last month.

Surveillance footage obtained by The Oregonian/OregonLive shows a group of boys gleefully running unsupervised down hallways. Eventually, the footage shows, the teens entered and then left an unlocked science classroom. Before the boys sprint away, one of them is shown on camera putting out a wet-floor caution sign.

The boys -- two of them 15 years old, two of them 16 and the other 17 -- have been charged with criminal mischief and burglary in the second degree, Simpson said. The case has been referred to prosecutors, Simpson said. The Oregonian/OregonLive generally doesn't identify juvenile suspects who haven't been charged as adults.

The vandalism happened the same night a basketball tournament was held at the school. A Roosevelt basketball coach who'd been on campus discovered late that night that water had been streaming from an emergency science room shower for hours, Principal Filip Hristic said. Attempts by The Oregonian/OregonLive to reach the coach have not been successful.

Roosevelt High School Vandalism 5 Gallery: Roosevelt High School Vandalism

Authorities found the science room not only flooded but wrecked. Hristic said foul language had been scrawled onto a white board and someone had taken a fire extinguisher and sprayed the room. Surveillance footage outside the room shows haze inside the room as the teens open the door.

The incident displaced six classrooms and left six bathrooms unusable. The science classroom was moved to a pantry, with other classes moving to other unconventional spaces, including a conference room and a gym.

The cleanup is likely to cost $200,000, said Joe Crelier, Portland Public Schools' director of risk management. Water also wrecked an elevator, which has an initial repair estimate of $17,000. Rebuilding everything else could cost about $350,000, he said.

The district anticipates being out $50,000, with insurance covering the rest, Crelier said.

The district hasn't picked a contractor, but bids for the repair work show the district expects to have the work done before students return from winter break, he said.

The school has been under intense construction since spring 2015, part of a $92 million rebuilding project funded with voter-approved bonds.

-- Bethany Barnes

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