Web Poll

What are you going to do for winter break?
 
 
 
 
InviteHub
Bomb Threat Empties Campus Medical Complex Print E-mail
Union leader alleges that campus officials knew of threatening calls prior to discovery of phony device in Leichtag building.
User Rating: / 1
PoorBest 
By Matthew L'Heureux
News Editor   
Thursday, Dec. 6, 2007
News2.jpg
FBI Special Agent Darrell Foxworth speaks to the media about a Dec. 5 bomb scare that evacuated UCSD’s medical and pharmacy schools before being revealed as a hoax. (Will Parson/Guardian)

Hundreds of staff and students were evacuated from the School of Medicine complex on Dec. 5 after a suspicious package was discovered in the Leichtag Biomedical Research Building. While the device was ultimately determined to be a hoax, questions regarding campus officials’ prior knowledge of the threat persist, according to a local union representative.

All buildings in the School of Medicine, along with the Skaggs School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences Cellular and Molecular Medicine East building, were evacuated after the package was discovered inside Leichtag at 10:26 a.m., according to FBI Special Agent Darrell Foxworth. At approximately 1 p.m., a campuswide e-mail from Vice Chancellor of Business Affairs Steven W. Relyea announced the evacuation and advised students and staff members to avoid the buildings.

Employees from the FBI, San Diego Police Department, UCSD Police Department, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, San Diego Fire-Rescue Department and U.S. Customs and Border Patrol responded to the scene, which was then swept for other suspicious devices.

“The Metro-Arson Task Force took the necessary steps to render safe the device,” Foxworth said. “It was determined that it was a hoax device and not an actual device.”

After determining that the package was not an actual bomb, officers turned the scene over to the evidence response team at approximately 5:15 p.m. The evacuation was contained and no one was hurt, Foxworth said.

Skaggs research associate Wenru Yu said that she received a phone call from a friend at Leichtag telling her to evacuate, but continued working until the alarm in her building went off.

“No one panicked,” Yu said. “We get lots of false alarms.”

After waiting outside their buildings for several hours, employees were informed they would receive administrative leave for the day and were permitted to go home, Deputy Director of University Communications Dolores Davies said.

Classes in nearby Center Hall were not canceled, though signs were posted warning passersby that there was a bomb scare across the street.

Foxworth declined to comment on the timeline of events leading up to the evacuation, and said he did not know when UCSD was initially aware of the threat.

However, Professional and Technical Employees Local 9 President Carolan Buckmaster said that campus officials were informed of the threats as early as the evening of Dec. 4, but still had School of Medicine employees report to work the next morning.

Buckmaster said that workers in the building’s vivariums — facilities in which animal research is performed — were told that threats were directed toward “the animal facility.” They were also asked to “look for any more suspicious objects” before they evacuated, she added.

“The UC received a threat last night against an animal facility and they let employees into the building this morning,” Buckmaster said. “As one of the workers and a representative for the workers, we were very disappointed that the university let the employees into work today.”

A timeline of the day’s events will be released when more details are made public, Foxworth said.

Leichtag researcher and UCSD graduate student Minh-Ha Do, one of the employees evacuated from the building, said that her coworkers appeared to have been aware of a threat more than an hour before the device was discovered.

“People knew of the threat by 9 o’clock, and the alarm went off between 10:30 to 11 o’clock,” Do said.

Revelle College senior Rachel Intriago, another researcher at Leichtag, said  the building had received harassing phone calls from an animal-rights group the day before the threat was received.

Buckmaster said that the Animal Liberation Front, a prominent animal-rights activist group, contacted Leichtag the night before and the morning of the threat.

“They said, ‘This is going to be huge,’” she said.

ALF representatives could not be reached for comment as of press time.

UPTE officials are planning to write a letter to Chancellor Marye Anne Fox detailing their grievances about how administrators handled the situation, Buckmaster said.

“We’ll be writing her to tell her how unhappy we are, and that we don’t want this happening again,” she said.

Readers can contact Matthew L'Heureux at mlheureu@ucsd.edu.

Readers have left 2 comments.
 1. Untitled
Guest User, Unregistered
Yeah, UPTE, let's get terrorized every time some bozo rattles our cages.

Can someone please dispatch the cluemobile?
 Posted 2007-12-06 10:59:48
 2. Untitled
Guest User, Unregistered
Beware ALF... One day nematodes will rule the earth! First they will conquer all the ALFies. NLF rulz.
 Posted 2007-12-06 19:13:27
Name :
E-mail :
       
[smiley=angry][smiley=cool][smiley=evil][smiley=happy][smiley=laugh][smiley=sad][smiley=shock][smiley=think][smiley=tongue][smiley=wink]
Comment(s) :
Verify :
What letter follows 'H' ?
 
Revelle’s ‘Next Step’ Leads to Grove Caffe

Sponsored Links