Chattanooga Times Free Press

FBI: Juvenile behind bomb threats at HBUs

- BY ALEXIS STEVENS

Federal investigat­ors say one person, a juvenile not identified because of his age, is responsibl­e for bomb threats earlier this year targeting historical­ly Black colleges, including Georgia campuses.

The suspect is too young to face federal hate crime charges, the FBI said this week. Instead, the agency is working with state prosecutor­s. Dozens of additional threats of violence remain under investigat­ion and could have originated outside of the U.S.

“This individual is under restrictio­ns and monitoring of his online activities,” the FBI said in a release. “Because of the subject’s age, no additional informatio­n can be provided.”

Georgia colleges and universiti­es are among those across the country that received the threats, which disrupted campus life but were unfounded. Explosive devices weren’t located, but federal investigat­ors believe the threats were racially motivated.

“These threats are despicable. They are designed to make us feel fearful and vulnerable,” former Spelman President Mary Schmidt Campbell said in a message posted on the college’s website earlier this year.

In February, Spelman, Albany State University and Fort Valley State University all received threats within the same week. The threats led many HBCU students and leaders to push for enhanced security, including requiring students to use their ID to enter some campus buildings, The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on previously reported.

At Fort Valley State, located about 30 miles south of Macon, the threat led to a campus lockdown lasting several hours. Campus police, local and state law enforcemen­t agencies searched all campus facilities and issued an all-clear by early afternoon.

Spelman College, near downtown Atlanta, was threatened twice, according to school leaders. In the second instance, the college received a telephone threat at 3 a.m. that a device would explode shortly after noon, officials previously said. No device was found, a spokeswoma­n said.

The FBI investigat­ed several minors before identifyin­g the one authoritie­s say is responsibl­e for threats made between Jan. 4 and Feb. 1. That suspect is not linked to other threats targeting at least 19 institutio­ns between Feb. 8 and March 2, the FBI said.

On June 7, another round of threats began, targeting not only 250 colleges and seven HBCUs, along with more than 100 high schools and two junior high schools, according to investigat­ors.

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