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  • Updated
    19
    Mar
    2013
    12:12am, EDT

    Student found dead in Florida dorm room planned campus attack, police say

    Police discovered a handgun, a rifle and a backpack with four improvised explosive devices, in the room of the University of Central Florida student who shot himself to death. There was also evidence that a broader attack may have been planned, police say. NBC's Mark Potter reports.

    By Jeff Black, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A former student found dead in a University of Central Florida dorm room along with makeshift explosives and weapons was planning an attack on the school's Orlando campus, the university police chief said on Monday.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The man’s body was found at about 1 a.m. at the Tower 1 residence hall, apparently from a self-inflicted gunshot wound, officials said.

    A fire alarm had gone off less than an hour earlier, and as campus police responded, a 911 call came in reporting a man with a gun, police said. When police went to investigate, they discovered the man’s body as well as a .45 caliber handgun, a .22 caliber tactical weapon and four homemade explosive devices. Hundreds of rounds of ammunition were also found, police said.


    The explosives were found in a backpack near the student. They have since been disabled and removed, university officials said.

    “Within the last hour we've discovered some material in the dorm room that makes this look like it was part of a planned attack on UCF campus,” university spokesman Grant Heston said in an afternoon news briefing.

    The dead man was identified as James Oliver Seevakumaran, a 30-year-old former student in the business school who, though not enrolled for the current semester, was still living in the dorm pending his removal from the tower, officials said.

    Notes and writings found in the dorm room indicate that Seevakumaran had a timeline of violence planned, university Police Chief Richard Beary said. No specific individuals were named as targets and he was acting alone, according to preliminary investigations.

    Beary speculated the fire alarm was set off by Seevakumaran to draw people out in the open.

    "While the crime scene processing was underway in that room we found some notes and some writings that indicated that this was a planned attack," Beary said. "This individual had laid out a timeline and laid out some of what we feel were going to be his actions. We’re pretty confident the fast response and some other situations maybe made him change his mind. At that point, he took his own life."

    The man’s roommate had placed the 911 call and locked himself in the bathroom, Beary said. Responding officers were able to locate the roommate and rescue him. In the bedroom, they found Seevakamaran’s body. Later they discovered the weapons and explosives.

    Seevakumaran had never been seen by university counselors or psychological services and did not have a record of misconduct, university officials said. 

    Morning classes at the university were canceled, and the dorm, which houses 500 students, was evacuated along with a nearby parking garage. The school reopened at about noon.

    The dorm near the college’s sports arena remained a crime scene most of the day as officers from the FBI, Orange County Sheriff’s Office and campus police investigated, university officials said. It was reopened in late afternoon, though the third floor where the body and explosives were found was still closed.

    Counseling services were being offered to students.

    "It could have been a bad day for everybody here," said Beary. "All things considered, I think we were very blessed at the University of Central Florida."

    Chilling discovery inside University of Central Florida dorm room. WESH's Mark Barger reports.

     

     

    This story was originally published on Mon Mar 18, 2013 5:11 PM EDT

    933 comments

    sad to say, but thank goodness he did the right thing....and didn't take any " innocent's " with him...

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  • 3
    Dec
    2012
    6:10am, EST

    'True Blood' town evacuated after 6 million pounds of explosives found

    Louisiana State Police via AP

    This photo released by the Louisiana State Police shows piles of explosive powder that were found by authorities at the Camp Minden industrial site in Doyline, La.

    By NBC News

    Police have evacuated a town in northwest Louisiana while they move out around 6 million pounds of illegally stored explosives.

    About half of the approximately 800 residents of Doyline, where scenes from HBO's popular "True Blood" series have been filmed, were evacuated Friday after authorities discovered around 1 million pounds of explosive powder stored by Explo Systems Inc. at Camp Minden, a former army ammunition plant.

    Authorities moved to evacuate the town of its remaining residents Sunday after discovering up to six times more M6 artillery propellant -- 6 million pounds -- at the site, according to NBC station KTAL in Shreveport.

    Police and Explo employees have moved just under 1 million pounds of the explosives into 18-wheelers, and have segregated another 250,000 pounds of the material for future removal, KTAL reported late Sunday.

    'Time-consuming' process
    In a statement, police said the process was “time-consuming” but so far there had been “no unexpected problems, incidents and injuries.”


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The explosives had been improperly stored, officials said. The material should have been housed in a bunker approved by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives and registered with the Louisiana State Police explosives division.

    Webster Parish Sheriff Gary Sexton did not expect the evacuation order to be lifted until Tuesday, KTAL reported.

    Doyline has shut local schools on Monday and was considering staying shut on Tuesday as well, according to Webster.

    Doyline is situated about 270 miles northwest of New Orleans.

    Louisiana State Police Col. Mike Edmunson said that the owners of Explo were in South Korea, but were scheduled to return to the United States on Monday, according to KTAL.

    State police said the improperly stored materials were discovered during a follow-up inspection to an Oct. 15 explosion at the Camp Minden property.

    Complete US coverage on NBCNews.com

    According to its website, Explo “has been demilitarizing / recovering explosives / propellant for over 15 years” and “has a unique, on-site capability for purifying valuable TNT from tritonal for reuse.”

    It has operated at Camp Minden for seven years, according to the site.

    Phone calls to the Louisiana State Police went unanswered early Monday. The man who answered the phone at the Webster Parish Sheriff’s Office said he was not authorized to comment to the media.

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    120 comments

    No need for regulations here.

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    Explore related topics: louisiana, explosives, shreveport, featured, true-blood
  • 17
    Nov
    2012
    6:14pm, EST

    Large amounts of bomb-making chemicals found in doctor's home, authorities say

    By NBC News staff

    Updated at 7:33 p.m. ET: Prosecutors say large amounts of chemicals commonly used for making bombs and explosive devices were found Friday afternoon at the home of a New Jersey doctor, NBC New York reported.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Roberto Rivera, 60, of Ridgewood faces several charges, including possession of a destructive device and recklessly creating a risk of widespread injury. His bail was set at $1 million cash, and it was not known Saturday if he had retained a lawyer, according to NBC New York.

    Read the original report at NBCNewYork.com

    Watch US News crime videos on NBCNews.com

    Bergen County Prosecutor John Molinelli says investigators also found several assault rifles and other weapons when they searched Rivera's home Friday night. Ridgewood police had initially responded to the home after receiving a report that potentially hazardous materials might be at the residence.

    The FBI and Bergen County Bomb Squad investigated, according to the Bergen County Record.

    Prosecutors said Rivera is unemployed but has a license to practice medicine in New York.

    According to a source familiar the case, Rivera told a girlfriend that he was going to build a bomb. She then alerted police. Rivera had not chosen a target.

    The source said that some anarchist literature was found in Rivera's home.

    203 comments

    Throw him in jail, but I am tired of the "assault weapons" crap. If you have a "real" assault weapon, it is full auto. Just because I own a legal SKS with grenade launcher, and bayonet does not make it an "assault rifle". There are legaly called "assault STYLE rifles. I am sick and tired of the anti …

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    Explore related topics: new-jersey, crime, explosives, nbcnewyork
  • 20
    Jul
    2012
    11:44am, EDT

    Police: 'Sophisticated' booby traps in Colorado shooting suspect's apartment

    Colorado shooting suspect James Eagan Holmes booby-trapped his apartment with wires and incendiary devices. Bomb experts are trying to figure out the best way to proceed so that they can search the apartment without triggering an explosion. NBC's Pete Williams reports.

    By Kari Huus, NBC News

    Updated at 8:00 p.m. ET: A law enforcement official said that authorities were facing a challenge in seeking to disarm what appears to be sophisticated explosive booby traps in the apartment of a suspected mass shooter in suburban Denver, NBC News' Pete Williams reported Friday afternoon.  


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Buildings around the four-story Aurora, Colo., apartment building where James Eagan Holmes lived were evacuated Friday after he said he had explosives in his apartment, police said. Holmes is suspected of opening fire at a midnight premiere of "The Dark Knight Rises," police said. The shooting left 12 dead and 59 others injured.

    FBI agents and police used a hook-and-ladder fire truck to reach Holmes' one-bedroom apartment on the third floor, said Oates. By hoisting a camera at the end of a 12-foot pole through a window, officers were able to get a view inside.

    Those familiar with what's inside said it's a jumble of apparent trip wires, bottles of liquid and containers of ammunition, fireworks and powders.


    "As a layman, it's not something I've ever seen before," said Aurora Police Chief Dan Oates, who added that police were expected to remain on the scene "for hours or days."

    There's no way to be certain that the booby traps were genuine, but law enforcers were operating on the assumption that they were, in part because of recent unspecified purchases made by Holmes, NBC News' Williams reported.

    Suspect James Eagan Holmes reportedly never said a word while allegedly shooting 71 people and killing 12 in a sold-out showing for Batman movie "The Dark Knight Rises." Colorado Governor John Hickenlooper said it was "the act of a very deranged mind." NBC's Miguel Almaguer reports.

    The use of trip wires and bottles of liquids suggested a setup that would cause mixing of chemicals that spontaneously ignite, said Carl Knowlen, senior researcher in the Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics at the University of Washington.

    The agents might include nitric acid and sulphuric acid, which are readily available in chemical supply stores, he said.

    "When mixed with many common substances (these chemicals) spontaneously ignite on contact," he said. "That would be an excellent incendiary source to light off propellants," which could include gun powder or ammunition.

    "He had an organic chemistry background and all of these combinations would be familiar to him," said Knowlen. "He may also have known how to formulate it from the diluted stuff you would get at a hardware store."

    Law enforcers were moving cautiously for safety reasons and in the effort to preserve as much evidence as possible — things like computers, notebooks and papers that could shed light on Holmes motive and planning.

    Authorities still hadn't entered the apartment Friday evening.

    "We’re trying to determine how to disarm the flammable or explosive materials in there," FBI Agent James F. Yacone said earlier Friday. "The pictures are pretty disturbing as far as how sophisticated it is. This could be a very long wait."

    Yacone said that more than 100 FBI agents were involved in the investigation, as well as personnel from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives and the Joint Terrorism Task Force, which combines the resources of federal, state and local agencies.

    "At this point, we do not see a nexus to terrorism," Yacone said.

    Holmes, 24, was arrested behind the Aurora theater. Police said he had two handguns, a shotgun and an assault rifle, at least three of which they believe were used in the attack.

    Oates said that Holmes had made a statement to officers about explosives in his apartment. Oates said Holmes also claimed to have explosives in his car, which was parked at the theater, but that proved to be false.

    Police evacuated five buildings around Holmes building, starting at about 6 a.m. MT, reported NBC News contributor Bill Briggs, who was on the scene.

    After barely escaping a mall shooting last month, aspiring sports reporter Jessica Ghawi did not survive the theater shooting. Her brother spoke to reporters about her remarkable spirit. NBC's Kristen Dahlgren reports.

    Darnell Woods was returning from his overnight shift at a local Home Depot at 6 a.m. and had been in his third-floor apartment across the street from Holmes' building for just a few minutes when he was ordered outside by police. 

    "They said that we had to get out because they didn't know if his building was going to explode," said Woods, who was sitting on a curb in the hot morning sun, a half block south of Holmes' building on Paris Street. He said he had been perched on that spot since for three and a half hours. He was sweating and wondering when he could return to his apartment.

    Holmes had lived in the Aurora apartment building since about May 2011, the Denver Post reported, citing records.

    Holmes apartment had always been quiet, according to other tenants in the apartment who spoke to KUSA reporter Jeremy Jojola, so they found it strange when, between midnight and 1 a.m. MT on Friday, there was loud techno music blasting from the apartment.

    He was a graduate student in the neuroscience program at the University of Colorado Medical School, a university spokesman told NBC News. He was in the process of withdrawing from school, the university confirmed.

    Follow Kari Huus on Facebook

    Related content from NBCNews.com:

    • 'Mass chaos' as12 shot dead at 'Dark Knight Rises' screening in Aurora, Colorado
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    164 comments

    A genius monster. Could definitely been a lot worse had he decided to imitate the suicide bomber in Bulgaria and go in with a backpack instead of a firearm. Where do these turds spawn from? Beyond words...a lot of people's lives ruined forever by one maggot.

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  • 18
    Jul
    2012
    8:21pm, EDT

    Man who died after standoff with NM cops had assault rifle, 'homemade bombs'

    New Mexico State Police

    Rex Michael Sherwood

    By Mike Brunker, NBC News

    A fugitive who spent five days on the run in New Mexico before dying in a weekend shootout with police left behind a vehicle containing explosives and questions about his possible links to anti-government groups, according to local authorities and published reports.

    Rex Michael Sherwood, 48, was found dead Sunday in a gas station in Dulce, N.M., on the Jicarilla Apache reservation, after a gunfight with police.

    It was Sherwood’s second violent confrontation with local law enforcement in a week, said Jake Arnold, a spokesman for the Rio Arriba County Sheriff’s Office. On July 10, he exchanged gunfire with tribal police who pulled him over for failing to use his turn signal. After leading the officers on a 10-mile chase, he abandoned his Ford delivery truck and fled into the woods, Arnold said.


    Sherwood resurfaced early Sunday, according to local news reports, when tribal police responding to a reported break-in at a Dulce gas station and convenience store came under fire from inside. After a lengthy standoff, during which the tribal officers were joined by state police, FBI agents and officers from other local agencies, a remote-controlled robot entered the building and detected the body of a single gunman lying on the floor.

     


    Follow Mike Brunker on Twitter and Facebook.


    The state medical examiner identified Sherwood through fingerprints. A statement Tuesday by the Jicarilla Apache Nation on Tuesday said that he had died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound from the AK-47 assault rifle he was carrying.

    KRQE-TV of Albuquerque quoted unidentified sources as saying that Sherwood was a computer expert with extreme anti-government opinions.

    It also quoted the sources as saying that “homemade bombs” were found in the back of the truck he abandoned.

    Arnold, the sheriff’s department spokesman, confirmed that explosives were found in the vehicle and said that Sherwood was wearing a T-shirt bearing the name of a right-wing militia group when he died.

    Frank Fisher, a spokesman with the Albuquerque FBI office, declined to discuss any details of the case. In a statement, the bureau asked anyone with information on the case to phone 505 889-1300. 

    Jicarilla tribal police and a New Mexico state police spokesman did not immediately return calls seeking comment. 

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    187 comments

    Another crazy American white terrorist in the making?

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  • 9
    Jul
    2012
    4:46pm, EDT

    Backpack with explosives found in ditch in Orange County, Calif.

    By NBCLosAngeles.com and msnbc.com

    Updated at 7:47 p.m. ET: A worn backpack containing six hand grenades and other explosives was discovered Monday under a bridge in Placentia, Calif., prompting the evacuation of nearby businesses.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    The Orange County Sheriff’s Department said county workers discovered the backpack around 9 a.m. Inside the pack were the grenades, blasting caps, fuse igniters, blasting powder and two canisters.

    Sheriff department spokesman Jim Amormino told msnbc.com that the items “are very volatile” and that the hand grenades appeared to be live. Officials initially believed there were two hand grenades but later counted four more.


    "The longer the backpack has been here, the more volatile these items are," Amormino said. He said it seemed whoever last had the backpack "had some type of knowledge of explosive devices," The Orange County Register reported.

    In addition to the grenades, the backpack contained black powder, white powder, an unknown type of fuse igniters, blasting caps, grenade fuses and two canisters.

    It wasn't immediately known how the backpack wound up in the ditch.

    The sheriff department bomb squad was on the scene although unable to send in a robot to destroy the explosives, Amormino told Register. A bomb squad technician was instead sent in wearing safety gear. Around 1 p.m., the hand grenades were blown up inside a containment vessel, the Register reported.

    The street running over the channel, Lakeview Avenue, has been closed, The Associated Press reported. Businesses have been evacuated.

    Msnbc.com's Isolde Raftery contributed to this report.

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    7 comments

    This might be the first time a deserted backpack wasn't a false alarm.

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    Explore related topics: california, orange-county, explosives
  • 1
    Jun
    2012
    3:44pm, EDT

    Feds: Woman admits building pipe bombs, claims it's just hobby

    Hall County Jail

    Celia Alchemy Savage

    By Miguel Llanos, NBC News

    A north Georgia college student was in jail Friday after federal officials accused her of possessing explosives and illegal drugs.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    Celia Alchemy Savage admitted that she had made five to seven pipe bombs, a Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives agent said in a document submitted to a federal court Thursday.

    She "claimed she has a passion for it" and that "detonating them for recreation was her 'hobby,'" the document stated.


    A judge later denied her bond and a preliminary hearing initially set for Friday was postponed until some time next week.

     

    Savage's father acknowledged she liked to shoot weapons, but he insisted she'd never resort to violence.

    "She's a real good person," Tommy Savage told wsbtv.com. "She likes to hunt and fish. She loves shooting. She goes sky diving. All kinds of stuff like that that you wouldn't really typically think of a young lady doing."

    Savage's online posts aren't likely to help her cause: She's seen in a YouTube video blowing up a toilet, and her Facebook page says this about herself: "I despise all law enforcement and any governing authority. I am not one for selective targeting but mass destruction."

    Her Facebook page also says she attends Gainesville State College and is studying mechanical engineering. Under "political views" she posted: "Anarchist."

    Savage was arrested Wednesday during a raid by federal agents on her rural home near Cornelia. Ga. 

    Court documents included allegations that Savage had used pot the previous day and meth two months ago, wsbtv.com said.

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    165 comments

    Is there a victim in this crime? No. If people want to build pipe bombs and set them off for fun, LET THEM.

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  • 7
    Mar
    2012
    2:52pm, EST

    Police: House has enough explosives to 'blow up the entire block'

    By Greg Cergol, NBCNewYork.com

    Police investigating a marijuana scent at a Long Island home discovered an arsenal of guns, grenades and bomb-making material that would have been enough to "blow up the entire block," NBC New York has learned. 

    Police officers went to the home on Narrow Lane in Woodmere after an alarm went off Tuesday afternoon and found Marc Ringel, 53, without identification, according to authorities. 

    Read the original report on the arsenal at NBCNewYork.com

    "As soon as he opens the door, the officers are struck by a very pungent smell of marijuana," said Deputy Inspector Kenneth Lack, of Nassau County Police. "They also see what appears to be a black semi-automatic handgun right inside the door, as well as what appears to be two military-style hand grenades." 


    Police took Ringel into custody and evacuated about 20 homes on the block as a precaution while they searched the rest of the home.

    During their search, police discovered a massive cache of weapons, including 100 handguns, 20 rifles, 15 pipe bombs, 15 handmade grenades and 50 pounds of bomb-making material, police said. 

    In addition to the weapons, police found a marijuana greenhouse as well as a pit in the backyard with a wire that extended into the house. Police believe Ringel used the pit to test explosives. 

    The home is owned by Ringel's parents, who live in Florida during the winter. Police said they weren't sure the parents knew Ringel was living in the house. 

    At this point, authorities said they do not know of any motive Ringel had for developing the arsenal, nor what he planned to do with it. Investigators, with the help of the FBI, are delving into his background and searching the house for writings that may indicate his plans. 

    County Executive Ed Mangano called Ringel "a potential madman." 

    Ringel has one prior criminal conviction, but it is unrelated to any weapons or bomb charges. He is a divorced high school graduate.

    Pending charges against Ringel are unspecified at this point. It wasn't known if he had an attorney.

    This article includes reporting by The Associated Press.

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    149 comments

    Leave him alone, he's only stockpiling for Dec 2012

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  • 24
    Jan
    2012
    12:21pm, EST

    Man, 19, accused in firebomb attacks on NJ synagogues

    This undated photo of Anthony Graziano was released by the Bergen County Prosecutor's Office, Tuesday, Jan. 24, 2012 in New York.

    By Jonathan Dienst, Shimon Prokupecz and Joe Valiquette|, NBCNewYork.com

    A 19-year-old New Jersey man is accused of tossing explosives into two synagogues, including one in Rutherford where a rabbi and his family were sleeping, prosecutors said Tuesday.

    Bergen County Prosecutor John L. Molinelli identified the suspect as Anthony Graziano, of Lodi, N.J.

    Authorities believe he acted alone in both attacks, a week apart, and was motivated by anti-Jewish bias.


    No one was seriously injured when several objects, including a rigged aerosol can and a Molotov cocktail, were thrown into the synagogue in Rutherford on Jan. 11, but Graziano has been charged with first-degree attempted murder, bias intimidation and aggravated arson in that attack.

    Read the original story on nbcnewyork.com

    The building houses Congregation Beth El, a school, and a residence where Rabbi Nosson Schuman lives with his family.

    One of the firebomb devices crashed through Schuman's second-floor bedroom window at about 4:30 a.m., burning him on the hand. His wife, five children and mother- and father-in-law escaped unscathed.

    In the Paramus attack on Jan. 3, Graziano is charged with first-degree aggravated arson and bias intimidation.

    Authorities released photos of a possible suspect last week. He was seen on surveillance video wearing a red and black track suit, black sneakers and a red wool skullcap. He was carrying a camouflage backpack.

    Prosecutors say they received several tips after releasing the photos, and confirmed it was Graziano on Monday.

    It was not immediately known whether he had an attorney.

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    66 comments

    I'm so glad he's been caught and that no one died. They can't do enough to this arsonist. Sick, twisted bastard.

    Show more
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