After Texas Mom Warns of Alleged Kidnapping Attempt on Her Kids, Police Say 'No Threat to the Public'

In an update from, police said all the individuals involved had been identified and that no arrest had been made

<p>getty</p> School Bus and girl — stock image

getty

School Bus and girl — stock image

A Dallas mom spoke out after a reported attempted kidnapping at her family's home, although police, who are still investigating, have since shared in an update that they "do not believe there is a threat to the public at this time."

On Tuesday, Aug. 13, Genna Skolnik shared home surveillance video with ABC News affiliate WFAA, which showed the reported incident that happened the day prior.

Skolnik’s two sons, Zachary and Jonathan, had been having a play date with several of their other 9-year-old friends in front of their home when two vehicles pulled up, per the outlet.

Door camera footage showed the group immediately run into the Skolnik home as a man from one of the vehicles briefly chased them after he exited his SUV, the outlet reported.

"I heard screaming and I thought, and I could hear commotion outside," Skolnik told Good Morning America on Thursday, Aug. 15.

The mother was joined by her two young sons for the televised interview.

"We get onto the sidewalk and we try to skip past and I hear the driver's telling my friends to get into their car," Zachary recalled.

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"I was the first one at the door screaming, 'Someone's trying to kidnap us!'" Zachary continued.

Her son Jonathan said the man who ran towards them had allegedly been trying to lure him into his SUV.

In an update on Aug. 13, Dallas police said that while the investigation is ongoing, "the involved individuals have been identified, are under the age of 18, and have been cooperating with the investigation."

"In this case, detectives do not believe there is a threat to the public at this time. No arrests have been made in this case," they added.

When contacted by PEOPLE on Friday, Aug. 16, police had no additional information to share.

A similar incident was caught on home security video miles away from Skolnik's home earlier that morning.

Shane Burke spoke to GMA after a teenaged girl was seen hiding behind his car, then knocking at his door, claiming a man had been following her in his car.

"She said that somebody that she didn't know had been following her, kind of gawking at her, staring at her, making her feel uncomfortable. She was extremely shook up," Burke said.

According to GMA, authorities said at the time that they did not believe the two incidents were related.

ABC News’ Eva Pilgrim also shared advice for parents on how to protect their children this school year.

Tips include “no names on backpacks” that would allow strangers to “confuse” or manipulate your kids into thinking the stranger knows who they are. The reporter also suggested to “be careful how much information you’re sharing about your kids on social media,” such as not posting the school they attend.

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