Otago Daily Times

Online threat traced to Colombia before data trail goes cold

- ELENA MCPHEE

AN online threat which sparked fears of a mass shooting at the University of Otago was made via an internet server in Colombia — but the trail ran cold when a Colombian company did not cooperate, a police report reveals.

The threat, made on message board 4chan in 2015, included a picture of a pistol and warned people against ‘‘coming to Otago University on Wednesday’’, leading to a police presence at the university on the day.

Police released a report on ‘‘Operation Varsity’’ to the Otago Daily Times yesterday.

The file said the cybercrime unit investigat­ing the threat found the person who made the post ‘‘very computerli­terate’’, knowing how to reroute and hide IP addresses.

Thirtyseve­n people were questioned about the threat, but no evidence was found linking them to the post.

The threat was made shortly after a shooting at an Oregon community college. It referred to mass shootings, and was traced to a server belonging to a telecommun­ications company based in Medellin, Colombia.

Despite requests for the IP address and other data that could identify the user, the firm did not release informa tion to police.

An Interpol detective senior sergeant made inquiries, but failed to obtain further informatio­n.

A police spokeswoma­n said yesterday no investigat­or was working on the case at present, but if any additional informatio­n came to light, it would be considered.

Computer security expert Henry B. Wolfe, a retired informatio­n science lecturer at the university, said tracing threats going through several anonymisin­g servers required a lot of resources, as well as the cooperatio­n of the country.

‘‘The trail back to the actual origin is really, really, really hard and sometimes impossible,’’ he said.

New Zealand Law Foundation Centre for Law and Policy in Emerging Technologi­es director Colin Gavaghan said the outcome when cybercrime crossed borders depended on how similar countries’ laws were.

New Zealand and Danish police forces recently worked together successful­ly tracking down a Danish criminal.

However there was ‘‘no unanimity at all across the world’’ about what was required for a company to disclose the identity of an anonymous poster, he said.

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