Kitty Mafia claims new bomb threat incidents in California and Georgia
Source: Telegram
Executive Summary
Kitty Mafia is claiming another set of bomb threat incidents tied to a Walmart in Anderson, California, a separate threat investigation handled by San Ramon Police, and a bomb threat that ended a basketball game at Tucker High School in Georgia. The cluster continues a broader pattern of hoax threats designed to trigger immediate police response, evacuations, and public disruption across unrelated jurisdictions.
Analysis
The pattern here is straightforward: select high visibility public targets, force an urgent response, and use the resulting official updates and local coverage to amplify fear and demonstrate reach. Even when authorities later determine the threat is not credible, the operational effect is still achieved through interruption, resource diversion, and community anxiety.
Anderson, California authorities investigated a bomb threat at a Walmart and later deemed it a false alarm, reopening the area.
San Ramon Police issued an update stating the threat under investigation did not appear credible, consistent with swatting style outcomes that still generate major disruption.
Tucker, Georgia reporting said a bomb threat ended a basketball game at Tucker High School, showing continued focus on school events where crowd disruption and rapid response are predictable.
This cluster fits the same campaign logic seen in prior Kitty Mafia related activity: frequent, distributed threats that are cheap to execute, hard to attribute in real time, and effective at producing high consequence reactions. The result is multi jurisdiction strain on public safety systems and a steady stream of incidents that normalize disruption as a form of coercion.

