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University Of Texas Defends Bomb Threat Response

First Posted: 09/16/2012 10:02 am Updated: 09/17/2012 12:16 pm

AUSTIN, Texas — University of Texas officials were defending their decision to wait more than an hour before evacuating due to a bomb threat, one of three such incidents reported at U.S. college campuses in a span of just a few hours.

Tens of thousands urgently heeded evacuation warnings Friday amid the threats at the University of Texas at Austin, North Dakota State University and much-smaller Hiram College in northeast Ohio.

The Texas school received the first threat around 8:35 a.m. from a man claiming to belong to al-Qaida, officials said. The caller claimed bombs placed throughout campus would go off in 90 minutes, but administrators waited more than an hour before blaring sirens on the campus of 50,000 students and telling them to immediately "get as far away as possible" in emergency text messages.

Authorities said they started searching buildings for explosives before the alert was issued.

"It's easy to make a phone call ... the first thing we needed to do was evaluate," UT President Bill Powers said. "If the threat had been for something to go off in five minutes, then you don't have the time to evaluate, you just have to pull the switch."

Not everyone agreed.

"What took so long?" student Ricardo Nunez said. "It should have been more immediate."

Recent violent protests outside U.S. embassies in the Middle East also stirred nervous tension among some students, and Texas officials acknowledged global events were taken into account.

Sirens wailed on the Austin campus and cellphones pinged with text messages when the initial alert when out. Students described more confusion than panic as they exited the sprawling campus, where police blocked off all roads heading in as lines of cars sat in gridlock trying to get out.

Tania Lara, a graduate student at the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs, said she was at work inside a central campus academic building when she got a text message to get as far away was possible.

"It was calm but nobody knew what was going on," she said, describing a crush of students heading for the exits. "No one was yelling `get out of here' or anything like that."

North Dakota State University President Dean Bresciani said about 20,000 people left the Fargo school's campuses as part of an evacuation "that largely took place in a matter of minutes." FBI spokesman Kyle Loven said NDSU received a call about 9:45 a.m. that included a "threat of an explosive device."

Police and school officials said the evacuation was as organized as could be expected, with one campus employee describing people as "being North Dakota nice" while driving away.

"Nobody was panicked and nobody was trying to speed or run over anybody," said Juleen Berg, who works at the NDSU heating plant. "Everybody was waiting their turn."

Graduate student Lee Kiedrowski of Dickinson, N.D., said he was walking on the NDSU campus when he got a text message telling him to evacuate within 15 minutes.

"The panic button wasn't triggered quite immediately," Kiedrowski said. "But there was definitely the thought that we live in a different world now, and with everything that's going on with the riots at the U.S. embassies in the Middle East, your brain just starts moving. You never really know what's going on."

Hiram College received an emailed bomb threat about 4 p.m. and ordered everyone on campus to evacuate. Hiram spokesman Tom Ford said safety teams with bomb-sniffing dogs checked "room by room, building by building" on campus, which is about 35 miles southeast of Cleveland where about 1,300 students are enrolled.

The campus was deemed safe and reopened about six hours later. Ford said the college was fortunate the threat came in late evening, when many students were getting ready for the weekend.

"A lot of kids just piled into their friends' cars and were out of here," he said.

___

Associated Press writers Will Weissert in Austin, Ramit Plushnick-Masti in Houston, Nomaan Merchant in Dallas; Paul J. Weber in San Antonio; Dave Kolpack in Fargo, N.D.; and Ashley M. Heher in Chicago contributed to this report.

The Texas school received the first threat around 8:35 a.m. from a man claiming to belong to al-Qaida, officials said. The caller claimed bombs placed throughout campus would go off in 90 minutes, but administrators waited more than an hour before blaring sirens on the campus of 50,000 students and telling them to immediately "get as far away as possible" in emergency text messages.

Authorities said they started searching buildings for explosives before the alert was issued.

"It's easy to make a phone call ... the first thing we needed to do was evaluate," UT President Bill Powers said. "If the threat had been for something to go off in five minutes, then you don't have the time to evaluate, you just have to pull the switch."

Not everyone agreed.

"What took so long?" student Ricardo Nunez said. "It should have been more immediate."

Recent violent protests outside U.S. embassies in the Middle East also stirred nervous tension among some students, and Texas officials acknowledged global events were taken into account.

Sirens wailed on the Austin campus and cellphones pinged with text messages when the initial alert when out. Students described more confusion than panic as they exited the sprawling campus, where police blocked off all roads heading in as lines of cars sat in gridlock trying to get out.

Tania Lara, a graduate student at the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs, said she was at work inside a central campus academic building when she got a text message to get as far away was possible.

"It was calm but nobody knew what was going on," she said, describing a crush of students heading for the exits. "No one was yelling `get out of here' or anything like that."

North Dakota State University President Dean Bresciani said about 20,000 people left the Fargo school's campuses as part of an evacuation "that largely took place in a matter of minutes." FBI spokesman Kyle Loven said NDSU received a call about 9:45 a.m. that included a "threat of an explosive device."

Police and school officials said the evacuation was as organized as could be expected, with one campus employee describing people as "being North Dakota nice" while driving away.

"Nobody was panicked and nobody was trying to speed or run over anybody," said Juleen Berg, who works at the NDSU heating plant. "Everybody was waiting their turn."

Graduate student Lee Kiedrowski of Dickinson, N.D., said he was walking on the NDSU campus when he got a text message telling him to evacuate within 15 minutes.

"The panic button wasn't triggered quite immediately," Kiedrowski said. "But there was definitely the thought that we live in a different world now, and with everything that's going on with the riots at the U.S. embassies in the Middle East, your brain just starts moving. You never really know what's going on."

Hiram College received an emailed bomb threat about 4 p.m. and ordered everyone on campus to evacuate. Hiram spokesman Tom Ford said safety teams with bomb-sniffing dogs checked "room by room, building by building" on campus, which is about 35 miles southeast of Cleveland where about 1,300 students are enrolled.

The campus was deemed safe and reopened about six hours later. Ford said the college was fortunate the threat came in late evening, when many students were getting ready for the weekend.

"A lot of kids just piled into their friends' cars and were out of here," he said.

___

Associated Press writers Will Weissert in Austin, Ramit Plushnick-Masti in Houston, Nomaan Merchant in Dallas; Paul J. Weber in San Antonio; Dave Kolpack in Fargo, N.D.; and Ashley M. Heher in Chicago contributed to this report.

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AUSTIN, Texas — University of Texas officials were defending their decision to wait more than an hour before evacuating due to a bomb threat, one of three such incidents reported at U.S. college cam...
AUSTIN, Texas — University of Texas officials were defending their decision to wait more than an hour before evacuating due to a bomb threat, one of three such incidents reported at U.S. college cam...
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renegade500
this slut votes.
01:41 PM on 09/17/2012
I work at UT, and I don't take issue with the administration waiting to check out the veracity of the call before evacuating. But there was a lot of confusion, and I think they need to do better. There was more information on local news channel websites than in the texts that we got (which just said there's an emergency on campus, to evacuate the buildings and get as far from buildings as possible, which on this campus, that's not an easy thing to do, since it's pretty dense, building wise). We've come to expect verbal instructions broadcast after the alarms go off, but that didn't happen. We didn't know where we were supposed to go, whether to stay on campus of off, how far away. After leaving our office, several of my coworkers got on our phones to find that is was bomb threats. Mostly people were calm and orderly, that is true, and I'm glad for that. But I also think a lot of people didn't take the threat that seriously, because of the confusion.
07:50 AM on 09/17/2012
People move a lot faster when you give them limited time.
03:46 PM on 09/16/2012
My daughter's elementary school is literally across the street from UT Campus. UT contacted the school at 10:02 AM -- 3 minutes before the bomb(s) was/were scheduled to detonate.

The school is Catholic -- across the street from the HIllel Center (Jewish) and near Protestant Churchs.

UT officials waited to long to to evaluate the situation before acting.

Granted the decision to evacuate should not be made lightly -- but if they *thought* it was credible after 30 minutes then call for the evacuation.

and communicate with the immediate community about the threat -- but not 17 minutes AFTER you call for the evacuation of your own campus.

UT Officials -- and their ERT process -- failed.
01:49 PM on 09/16/2012
At least UT reacted faster than Obama on his embassy debaucle.
02:10 PM on 09/16/2012
Your propaganda would be more compelling if you used spell check.
02:53 PM on 09/16/2012
It would be propaganda if it weren't true..sadly it is.
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Ms Liann
F&F Feedback Appreciated
04:25 PM on 09/16/2012
"circle of fifths" giving aid & comfort to the enemy during wartime carries the death penalty.
05:20 PM on 09/16/2012
Well we don't need to kill him, just vote him out of the Oval office. But, good call.
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12:00 PM on 09/16/2012
UT? bomb threat, they (terrorist) would not bomb them...they are their biggest supporters in the usa. Ut is the biggest anti-gov. , anti-american university in the USA. Heck, if anything, they could easily find people to join their cause there, those liberal students hate the constitution, laws, america, government, and christians. Terrorist like al-qaeda would not bite the hands that feed them.....would they? ....naaaah.........
12:50 PM on 09/16/2012
You obviously have never visited nor attended a class there. I have three generations of my family that have attended and graduated from UT. Includes myself, my wife, my great uncles, my uncle, my sister and now my son and daughter are there. My son is to graduate with a MD. and PHD. He is so conservative that he can't stand anything liberal. My daughter is a Biophysics major with a 4.0. She wouldn't consider an anti govt or anti american label because she is at UT. In fact, she intends to join our govt. to help in the bioterrorism effort. My uncle was a state district judge renowned for his conservative and supportive judgements regarding our constitution. Your opinion is valued but entirely BS!
06:05 PM on 09/16/2012
you are a minority, longhorn.  It still a liberal college. sorry about your alma.... 
02:18 PM on 09/16/2012
You are living in a dark world of ignorance. It is always amusing how you right wing fanatics assume that you own the constitution and the rule of law, these are the two greatest defenders of liberal thought in America, I shudder to think of what would have become of America without them to protect us from the extreme right.
06:09 PM on 09/16/2012
hahahaha another fail at labeling people. sorry wacky wabbit, not here. just calling it as I see it. If i was a republican, i would say it. But why lie? you guys lie enough to your own.
11:50 AM on 09/16/2012
gotta be another bottom feeding attorney, complain of over reacting, then suing when you dont, your empty chair politicians hard at doing nothing as usual
12:02 PM on 09/16/2012
Austi area it's full of those........
05:31 PM on 09/16/2012
thats what donkey-crats gave the nation, lower standards while the world passes by, the nations credit ratings continue dropping & they want to stay on the same course. gotta hand them a bone, they got dumb & dumbererererer following like lil jimmy ducklings & its somewhat comical to see how so many can be so dumb
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rhettphive
GOP- unaccountable since Y2K
02:09 PM on 09/17/2012
But Rick just said, "smart people will never be on our side"
I guess you just proved his point.
06:36 PM on 09/17/2012
rite phive, yer just like kreskin, all knowing
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RickW44
11:47 AM on 09/16/2012
Multiculturalism at its best!
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websailor
12:54 PM on 09/16/2012
It seems that way does it not.
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websailor
01:55 PM on 09/16/2012
Thank you most appreciated
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gongui1945
11:44 AM on 09/16/2012
My guess is that they didn't want to be criticize like they did Romney ,let's wait a while and see if it goes off !!!
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11:03 AM on 09/16/2012
Texas is not part of the Chicken Little crowd from Washington DC. They know the sky is not falling and take a measured response to a situation, not a panic response common in the Federal Government. Well done U of T.
12:01 PM on 09/16/2012
You must be another hippie student from there....or at least from Arkansas........
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12:15 PM on 09/16/2012
Penn State 19'70, BA - Math, PBK; Temple 1973 JD. Eat your heart out or learn how to use ellipses anyhow.
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websailor
12:55 PM on 09/16/2012
No Texas is a bunch of nuts with guns.
02:57 PM on 09/16/2012
I'm guessing you aren't from here. Why don't you take a visit? We're nicer than we look :)
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renegade500
this slut votes.
01:52 PM on 09/17/2012
You've clearly never been to Austin.