CLEVELAND—A man accused of e-mailing an Indiana teenager about conducting a Columbine-style attack on two schools was scheduled to make his first court appearance Monday.
Lee Billi, 33, of the Cleveland suburb of Lakewood, was arrested Thursday and jailed. A 16-year-old Indiana boy, whose name wasn’t released, was ordered by a judge to remain in a juvenile detention center and undergo a psychological evaluation.
Police in Lakewood have said they don’t know how far along the two were in the alleged plan but said the two were talking about a Columbine-type plot, a reference to the 1999 massacre at a suburban Denver high school in which two students killed 12 classmates and a teacher before committing suicide.
Billi is charged with conspiracy to commit murder. An arraignment was scheduled in Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court.
Authorities said Billi and the teenager exchanged e-mails on April 20 and discussed mass murders at the same time at the teen’s school near South Bend, Ind., and at another location, which police haven’t identified.
A computer was removed from Billi’s home in addition to computer disks, papers, books and three partial boxes of handgun ammunition, authorities said.
At the teen’s home near downtown South Bend, authorities said they found more than 100 knives and several illegal snakes.
The boy lived in his deceased grandfather’s house in a rundown neighborhood scattered with vacant houses.
Authorities said a school officer investigating an unrelated threat at the teen’s school, Penn High, discovered Internet postings in which the teen discussed his support for the Columbine shooters. The teen was questioned about his postings and school officials learned he had exchanged e-mails with an unidentified person, authorities said.



