A Florida mother has been arrested after she allegedly made a bomb threat to her son’s high school, because he wasn’t served extra food at the cafeteria, according to a police affidavit.

Anaya Metoya Smith, 41, was arrested and booked at the Brevard County jail Wednesday for leaving a threatening voicemail with Cocoa High School on the evening of Feb. 3.

"If you don’t start feeding my ... children better ... I’m gonna come round ... and blow that mother ... up," Smith allegedly said in her voicemail, according to the probable cause affidavit.

The mother was reportedly enraged over the amount of food her son was being given at lunch.

The following morning, the school staffer who heard the voicemail reported the threat to the law enforcement.

The investigators evacuated the location and initiated a search, but found no evidence of an explosive or harmful device.

Although, Smith didn’t leave her name on the voicemail, an investigating officer who claimed to have had numerous encounters with the woman said he recognized her voice from the message on the school’s answering machine, the affidavit stated.

Smith faces a felony charge of making a false report to bomb state property and a misdemeanor charge of interfering with school administrative functions.

However, Smith’s sister, Andrea Johnson said that her sister was "falsely accused based on documentation that was messed up at Cocoa High School".

Smith bonded out of the Brevard County jail Thursday afternoon, after posting a cash or surety bond of $5,250, jail records show.

"The school district is very thankful for the responsiveness of law enforcement the day of the bomb threat and their subsequent investigation. It’s a police matter," Russell Bruhn, a spokesperson for Brevard Public Schools told NBC News.

According to court documents, the school authorities also confirmed that Smith’s son had got into "a verbal argument" with a cafeteria worker on Feb. 3 “in regards to wanting extra food".

When the affidavit was filed on April 7, Smith's son was no longer at the school.

"Not her son, not her telephone. Not her anything," Johnson told WKMG. "It’s all going to be cleared up and we’re going to take care of her, but there are definitely some people who need to be held accountable because this is not the way that it’s supposed to go."

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Representational image. dwalters0512/Pixabay.

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