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  • 12
    Mar
    2012
    5:32am, EDT

    Cops: University of Maryland student vowed rampage would 'make it to national news'

    University of Maryland student vowed to go on "shooting rampage". WRC's Darcy Spencer reports.

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    Updated at 2:50 p.m. ET: COLLEGE PARK, Md. -- A University of Maryland student has been arrested and charged with posting an Internet threat claiming he planned to go on a shooting rampage on campus hoping to kill as many people as possible.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    Campus police said in a statement that 19-year-old Alexander Song, of Fulton, Md., had been identified as the person who posted plans on a website for a rampage.

    "I will be on a shooting rampage tomorrow on campus," police quoted Song as saying in the Saturday posting. "Hopefully I kill enough people to make it to national news." 

    The message also warned people to "stay away from the mall." Police did not elaborate.


    Capt. Marc Limansky told the Baltimore Sun that police were informed of the alleged threats after a former student noticed them on reddit.com. Two people also contacted the university after chatting with Song on omegle.com, Limansky added.

    A sophmore honors student, Song was taken to a hospital for a psychiatric evaluation after his arrest Sunday.

    Song, who was not armed when he was arrested, faces a misdemeanor charge of disturbing school activities.

    A police spokesman said it was unclear if Song had an attorney.

    The university website describes Song as a member of a campus research program for select honors students who explore how science and technology relates with society. The Gemstone Program lists Song as scheduled to graduate in 2014.

    Song was one of the leaders of a student research team, Be Pure, that was studying ways to make methane gas safe for energy consumption, said James Wallace, a mechanical engineering professor and director of the Gemstone Program.

    Steven Hutcheson, the team's advisor, said Song had once been one of the more vocal members of the team but had recently appeared quieter. Hutcheson and a couple students who knew Song said there was no indication that he was unhappy or capable of violence.

    "I wish there had been something because I would have loved to have helped him," Hutcheson said.

    Anjana Sekaran, another member of the Be Pure team, said she had known Song since last year, "and he is a very intelligent, good-natured individual. He would never hurt anyone."

    After the arrest, some students complained on Twitter that the school's emergency alert system was not activated after police learned of the threat. University President Wallace Loh said in a statement Monday that officials decided that sending out a campus-wide alert before Song was in custody threatened to interfere with their investigation.

    "The police are confident that any threat to our community was mitigated once the student was taken into custody," Loh said.

    The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

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    390 comments

    As often as these tragedies have happened, the police have no choice but to investigate. If enough of this guy's friends were concerned enough to report it and thought him capable of doing something like this, certainly the police have an obligation to check it out.

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    Explore related topics: internet, threats, featured, university-of-maryland, crime-and-courts, alexander-song
  • 9
    Mar
    2012
    9:03pm, EST

    Portland man charged with sending white powder letters to Congress

    By msnbc.com staff

    An Oregon man has been arrested and charged in connection with mailing more than 100 letters containing white powder to members of Congress and news organizations in recent weeks, the FBI said Friday night.

    The man, Christopher Lee Colson, 39, of the Portland are, is scheduled to be arraigned Monday in federal court. A grand jury in Portland on Friday indicted Carlson on one count of mailing a threatening communication to a member of Congress and one count of mailing a letter threatening to use a biological weapon to a U.S. senator.



    Follow @msnbc_us

    The powder in all of the letters, which were still showing up at offices in Washington as recently as Thursday, has tested negative for toxic substances, the FBI said. But Greg Fowler, the FBI's special agent in charge in Oregon, said, "Threatening letters — whether hoax or real — are serious concerns that federal law enforcement agencies will aggressively pursue."

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    122 comments

    Can you guys quit it with the retarded partisan bickering for more than 2 seconds? That is all I read on these threads. I hardly ever see real discussion on here. It is all finger pointing, "he said, she said" @!$%#. No wonder this country can't get anything done. Everyone is divided and unwilling t …

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    Explore related topics: washington, congress, oregon, portland, crime, letters, threats, white-powder

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