University Investigating 'Intercepted' Bomb Threat E-Mail

By and
PUBLISHED OCTOBER 23, 2007

A message sent from a Columbia student's e-mail address earlier today claiming to have intercepted a bomb threat is being investigated jointly by several agencies, including the New York Police Department, Federal Bureau of Investigation and Homeland Security.

The message, sent from a public computer terminal, read, "Please contact someone fast. I just intercepted a message that someone will blow up Florida Airport."

The e-mail then gave a Jupiter, FL, address and phone number for "the person doing the blowing up."

Several calls placed to that number were not answered.

The student, whose name Spectator withheld, said he did not send the e-mails and that he had spent the "frustrating" day working with the various officials, who also confiscated his computer and interrogated his suitemates. The student said he noticed the e-mails, which were sent to people in his address book, at about 1:45, and that he called 911 then.

The student said the e-mails were all sent between 1:22 and 1:36, which the police reports corroborated. He added that one of the e-mails was sent to a government address, and that the e-mail offered more specific information.

The student said he suspected the e-mails were sent when he checked his account at a public computer terminal in Dodge Fitness Center. He said that, while he had reset the computer terminal, he had not signed off his gmail account. He also said the agents spoke of the possibility his e-mail account was hacked into.

"I don't exactly know how this person got onto my account," he said. "It is worrisome. I don't know if that's how they got into my gmail."

The NYPD responded to his call and brought more agents to his East Campus dorm within the hour. The Officers at the Jupiter Police Department said at about 4 p.m. they had not received notice of the e-mail, but later tonight an officer said the JPD was working with the other agencies. The JPD will not send officers to the home address listed in the e-mail without the other agencies.

The student said he was not treated as a suspect but that he was worried about he'd lost time to work on his thesis. "I have two tests tomorrow. I have to study," he said. "It's been frustrating, it's been all-consuming."

But he said the agents had been "very nice" and said it might have been a "positive" incident. "Maybe we saved someone today," he said.

Messages left around 5 p.m. with the state homeland security public information office were not returned. University Spokesman Robert Hornsby confirmed an investigation is underway but did not comment further on the matter.

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....that's actually correct.

The person "doing the blowing up" won't answer the phone? And the Jupiter police know nothing about any of this? Oh well, let's see what happens. Homeland Security at its best.

Don't they have bonehead English at Columbia? Take a class.

Joke: how many journalism students at CU does it take to screw up one article? Two(2) Tom Faure and Jacob Schneider, LOL

What are you people talking about? This reads like normal English to me.

LOLOLOLOLOLO!~!!!!! Or not.

"The Jupiter Police Department said it had not heard notice of the e-mail..."

Jesus, learn how to write.

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