1. A person shall not, through the use of any means of oral, written or electronic communication, including, without limitation, through the use of cyber-bullying, knowingly threaten to cause bodily harm or death to a pupil or employee of a school district or charter school with the intent to:
- (a) Intimidate, harass, frighten, alarm or distress a pupil or employee of a school district or charter school;
- (b) Cause panic or civil unrest; or
- (c) Interfere with the operation of a public school, including, without limitation, a charter school.
2. Unless a greater penalty is provided by specific statute, a person who violates the provisions of subsection 1 is guilty of:
- (a) A misdemeanor, unless the provisions of paragraph (b) apply to the circumstances.
(b) A gross misdemeanor, if the threat causes:
- (1) Any pupil or employee of a school district or charter school who is the subject of the threat to be intimidated, harassed, frightened, alarmed or distressed;
- (2) Panic or civil unrest; or
- (3) Interference with the operation of a public school, including, without limitation, a charter school.
3. As used in this section:
- (a) “Cyber-bullying” has the meaning ascribed to it in NRS 388.123.
(b) “Oral, written or electronic communication” includes, without limitation, any of the following:
- (1) A letter, note or any other type of written correspondence.
- (2) An item of mail or a package delivered by any person or postal or delivery service.
- (3) A telegraph or wire service, or any other similar means of communication.
- (4) A telephone, cellular phone, satellite phone, page or facsimile machine, or any other similar means of communication.
- (5) A radio, television, cable, closed-circuit, wire, wireless, satellite or other audio or video broadcast or transmission, or any other similar means of communication.
- (6) An audio or video recording or reproduction, or any other similar means of communication.
- (7) An item of electronic mail, a modem or computer network, or the Internet, or any other similar means of communication.
(Added to NRS by 2001 Special Session, 184; A 2009, 690)