Naval Academy dropout indicted over threat that led to accidental shooting

A midshipman who dropped out of the U.S. Naval Academy in 2024 was charged last week with threatening a ‘mass execution’ of his former classmates on a social app. The threat caused a school-wide lockdown that nearly ended in tragedy when a responding police officer shot a current student during a chaotic scuffle.

Jackson Fleming, 23, of Chesterton, Indiana, was indicted by a federal grand jury on October 8 with one count of “interstate communications with a threat to injure” against the Annapolis, Maryland school, which he left midway through his junior year, according to local media coverage. Fleming posted on September 11 on the social app Jodel that he would be “carrying out the mass execution of my peers in a couple.”

Fleming entered the school with the class of 2025 and left as a junior, which the school calls a midshipman second class.

The federal charges against Fleming were first reported by the Baltimore Banner and Annapolis Capital Gazette. Task & Purpose reviewed the two-page indictment against Fleming on a database of federal court documents.

School officials confirmed in the days after the lockdown that the threat had included a plan to dress as a police officer.

Though Fleming was in Indiana when he alledgedly posted the threat last month, his location and identity were not clear to school leaders, who ordered a lockdown across campus.

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The lockdown, in turn, led to chaotic scene in which a police officer shot a student in self defense after the two mistook each other as an active threat. The nearly tragic mishap occured after the midshipman — following lockdown procedure — barricaded himself in his dorm room inside the school’s Bancroft Hall, the massive dorm in which all 4,400 of the school’s students live for all four years at the school.

As police began to sweep through Bancroft’s hallways shouting instructions, the detail in Fleming’s alleged threat to dress like a police officer was on the mind of at least one student. As the police neared the student’s room, he attacked them, swinging his school-issued parade rifle, a non-functioning but authentic and heavy M-14.

When the student struck an officer in the head with the rifle, a police officer shot the student in the shoulder, according to a Navy release. The midshipman was treated at a local hospital and released the next day. The police officer suffered minor injuries.

 

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Matt White is a senior editor at Task & Purpose. He was a pararescueman in the Air Force and the Alaska Air National Guard for eight years and has more than a decade of experience in daily and magazine journalism.


Nicholas Slayton is a contributing editor for Task & Purpose, covering conflict for over 12 years, from the Arab Spring to the war in Ukraine. His previous reporting can be found on the non-profit Aslan Media, The Atlantic, Al Jazeera, The New Republic, The American Prospect, Architectural Digest, The Daily Beast, and the Los Angeles Downtown News. You can reach him at [email protected] or find him on Twitter @NSlayton and Bluesky at @nslayton.bsky.social.


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