PALM BEACH, Fla. – Jenique Gray didn’t get along with her roommate at Palm Beach Atlantic University, especially because the girl used her toothbrush to clean their shared toilet.

So Gray used a smart phone app that allows users to pose as another person’s phone number, and sent hundreds of messages, including death threats, to herself and other students while pretending to be her roommate, West Palm Beach police told WPTV.

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“I can tap into your phone, drug you or even break into your apartment and you will never know,” one of the messages read, according to court records cited by the Palm Beach Post.

“I’m not afraid of the police (expletive) I saw that (expletive) leave what the (expletive) can she do you all will (expletive) die!” another read.

Gray, a 20-year-old freshman, allegedly described the specific ways she – posing as her roommate – would kill her classmates.

“They left you all alone I can bomb that office now and you both die or better shoot it up but I won’t I prefer you to suffer not knowing how close I am to you,” another text read.

Police contend that Gray and three other students reported the threatening text messages in late September, pointing to the roommate who was suspended from school for drug and alcohol use. Gray allegedly referenced her toothbrush her roommate used to clean the toilet in describing how the two did not get along, the Post reports.

Police set up a call with the girl accused of texting the threats, but she alleged she was being “framed” and denied any involvement, though she admitted to using the toothbrush to clean the toilet bowl.

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“Eventually the students receiving the threatening text messages, including Gray, handed over their phones to police for a ‘forensic download.’ That’s when police found the Pinger app on Gray’s phone and the threatening texts,” the Post reports.

Gray allegedly confessed to the scheme when confronted by police and said it was payback for the infamous toothbrush incident and other disagreements.

Palm Beach Atlantic student Davidson Baker described the ordeal as “kind of a scary situation.”

“You never know who is in your backyard,” he told WPTV.

“You got to be looking out for what might be going on around the scenes,” another PBAU student, David Mellinger, told the news site.

University officials also issued a statement about Gray’s arrest, stressing that “as an institution that upholds accountability, excellence, integrity, love, respect and unity as its values, it is disturbing to learn that someone from our community is accused of violating these tenants.”

“Palm Beach Atlantic will follow its standard process to determine whether the student has violated University policies separate from any legal proceedings,” the statement read. “As a community, we will be praying for the alleged victims and the student accused of these actions.”

Gray, who does not have a prior criminal record, was formally charged with 10 counts of aggravated stalking, as well as 10 counts of written threats to kill or do bodily harm.

Circuit Court Judge Cheryl Caracuzzo declined to order a mental health evaluation for Gray at a hearing Saturday morning, and instead set her bond at $3,000, the Post reports.