In the last week, two Osceola High School students were arrested after guns were found in their backpacks.

On Sept. 28, students told a teacher that one of their classmates flashed a gun after leaving the bus stop, and brought that gun to school that day.

Then on Oct. 8, another gun was found in a different student's bag.

"I was shocked that someone would do that here. I was just kind of nervous about what could happen," said Rommel Fernandez, a student at Osceola High School.

In one case, Kissimmee police said the student told his friend he was being threatened online and he didn't know who was doing it so he brought the gun to scare them away.

In the other, police said friends said the students wanted to fight someone and was also using the gun as a scare tactic. His friend told police the boy had been bringing the gun around for weeks.

Although it clearly worked in scaring those students around them, neither gun was loaded. When teachers found out about the guns, the police were immediately notified. The guns were safely confiscated, without incident.

We were told both students were arrested and taken to the juvenile detention center. The School District said both students have been suspended and have both been recommended for expulsion.

Parents were notified of each incident the day it happened through an automated message from the principal. During that message, the principal explained they would continue to conduct random K-9 and metal detection searches.

However, students and parents said they want to see some drastic changes following two different gun incidents.

"More security should be good, absolutely," said parent Pedro Gomez.

"I hope they know that a gun is not a toy. Like you could hurt someone or kill someone," said Rommel Fernandez, a freshman at Osceola High.

The boys did tell police where they got their guns. Police said one stole the gun from a family friend who hadn't gotten a chance to report it stolen.

The other told police he bought the gun off the street from a random guy he passed on his way to school, but he wouldn't tell police who it was.