A 12-year-old junior high student not only emailed bomb threats to his school two days in a row, he videotaped himself doing so, authorities said.

Jefferson County sheriff's officials said bomb threats were emailed to Center Point Middle School both Wednesday and Thursday of last week. On Wednesday, a school administrator received an email that read, "I planted a bomb in one of the bathrooms you going to need a bomb suad and a remoted in one of the lockers theres a wite remote to stop the bomb you have 40 minutes too get all the kids out of the elementary school and middle school or everybodys dead." Two minutes later, a second email was received that read, "im leaving the bored school now right 40 minutes," said Chief Deputy Randy Christian.

Both schools were evacuated and the sheriff's office conducted searches of the schools with bomb-sniffing dogs. No bombs were found and classes resumed.

On Thursday, just after 9:30 a.m., the same administrator received another threatening email. It read, "If you don't get everybody out of the school out to the back where the busses be or everybody gone die you have 15 minutes starting now. Theres a bomb hiden in the new lunchroom inside the water fountain I broke intoo the school last nite unset the alarms and planted the bomb im leaving the bord school right now."

Once again the schools were evacuated and searched, Christian said. No bombs were found.

Investigators traced the emails to a county alternative school where the 12-year-old male student from Center Point was found to have sent all three emails. The student had made cell phone videos of himself sending them.

Authorities on Friday obtained a juvenile petition charging the student with making terrorist threat. The case will be handled in juvenile court.

"Hopefully at some point this young man will realize the gravity of what he did. Disrupting school and tying up our resources caused quite the scene,'' Christian said. "He is fortunate that he is at an age where he can recover from the path he is traveling down."

"I hope someone can get his attention and that light comes on for him. It's all fun and games until that steel door shuts on you,'' he said. "This is a good reminder for parents and adult mentors to get involved in that young person's thought process and direction."