A Rancho Bernardo man whose teenage son allegedly threatened to shoot up his high school was out of custody Wednesday, not long after prosecutors charged him with illegally possessing a large array of weapons.
Neal James Anders, 45, was arrested after his 14-year-old son allegedly made threats to carry out a shooting at Rancho Bernardo High School.
In investigating the threat allegations, prosecutors said police searched the family's home and a storage facility and found "an arsenal of weapons" that included rifles, pistols, flamethrowers and items that can be used to assemble firearms.
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Prosecutors argued the weapons were accessible to Anders' children and that his son allegedly told other students that he had access to the guns because a lock securing the firearms was broken.
After pleading not guilty last week, Anders remained jailed on $300,000 bail, but jail records indicate he is now out of custody.
His defense attorney, Gregory Garrison, stated in court last week that police have seized all of Anders' firearms.
A new criminal complaint recently filed against Anders added a dozen new charges, bringing his maximum possible prison term to 10 years if convicted. Those 25 felony and misdemeanor charges include possession of an assault weapon, possession of a short-barreled rifle, and manufacturing or assembling unserialized handguns.