Yorkshire Post

Teenager’s bomb hoaxes caused ‘400 UK schools to be evacuated’

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A TEENAGER has been convicted over bogus bomb threats that triggered the evacuation of more than 400 UK schools and an airport security scare.

George Duke-Cohan twice targeted schools in the UK and US with hoax messages - before phoning-in a fake report of a hijacked aircraft while under investigat­ion.

The 19-year-old, of Mutchetts Close, Watford, pleaded guilty on Monday to three counts of making hoax bomb threats, during a hearing at Luton Magistrate­s’ Court, the National Crime Agency (NCA) said.

He had first created panic in March 2018 when he emailed thousands of schools in the UK warning about an explosive.

More than 400 schools were evacuated as a result, according to the NCA.

Police arrested him days later, but he was able to send another batch of emails to schools in the US and UK while under investigat­ion in April. His messages claimed a pipe bomb had been planted on the premises.

Duke-Cohan was arrested for a second time and released on precharge bail with conditions that he did not use electronic devices.

Before long his name was in the frame for a third hoax - regarding a bogus tip-off that hijackers had taken over a United Airlines flight between UK and San Francisco.

An investigat­ion between the NCA and the FBI was launched when a hacker group known as “Apophis Squad” claimed on social media that it had successful­ly grounded flight UAL 949 on August 9.

Detectives found that DukeCohan had made the calls to San Francisco Airport and their police force while he was on precharge bail for the two previous offences.

He posed as a worried father, claiming his daughter had contacted him from the flight to say her plane had been hijacked by gunmen with a bomb. The plane was placed on lockdown when it arrived at San Francisco.

He was arrested for a third time at his home in Watford, Hertfordsh­ire, on Friday.

 ??  ?? GEORGE DUKE-COHAN: Twice targeted schools in the UK and US with hoax messages.
GEORGE DUKE-COHAN: Twice targeted schools in the UK and US with hoax messages.

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