Dayton Daily News

PACKAGE REMOVED NEAR DAYTON MALL IN BOMB SCARE

Dayton Mall incident is third in a month for Dayton Bomb Squad.

- By Nick Blizzard Staff Writer

A suspicious package attached to a parked car outside two restaurant­s at the Dayton Mall was removed by a robot Monday night as customers of the eateries were kept from their vehicles for hours.

The questionab­le package reported outside Bravo Cucina Italiana and the Rusty Bucket Restaurant and Tavern prompted a nearly five-hour investigat­ion, the third such high-profile incident involving the Dayton Bomb Squad in a month.

No explosives were found, but packages are the most common suspicious item reported, federal data shows. And Ohio ranks among the top five in reported bomb threats, according to a Department of Justice report.

“We have to take these things seriously,” Miami Twp. Capt. John Magill said. “If you saw the device, you would understand. It was something that we had to take

continued from B1 seriously.”

Meanwhile, bomb squad members “strongly encourage the public to report any suspicious situation.”

Police have a person of interest, but no arrests have been made, according to the township. Magill declined to reveal the contents of the package or how it was attached to the car, which he said was registered locally.

A couple called for help upon returning to their car and noticed what appeared to be a black container that was attached to the driver’s side door handle, according to the township.

“It wasn’t just laying on the ground,” Magill said of the container. “It wasn’t just sitting in a corner or abandoned in an alley way.”

Officers cordoned off the parking lot and stopped traffic from entering and exiting that area of the mall. Patrons of Bravo and neighborin­g businesses were ordered to stay inside and were moved to the rear of their respective locations for their safety, according to the township.

“Until we knew exactly what we were dealing with, we used the utmost caution,” Miami Twp. Police Chief Ron Hess said in a statement issued Tuesday. One Bravo customer said police kept him from his car for at least two hours.

Aside from the bomb squad, several Miami Twp. police crews responded, as did the Dayton airport K-9 unit and Miamisburg police, Magill said.

The package was reported about 7:30 p.m. and the scene was not cleared until about 1:20 a.m. Tuesday, Magill said.

The bomb squad also investigat­ed reports of two suspicious packages on consecutiv­e days last month.

On Nov. 26, the evacuation of the downtown Greater Dayton Regional Transit Authority hub disrupted travel for several hours due to a suspicious package.

Officials responded to South Jefferson Street, near the RTA hub, about 8:30 a.m. The suspicious package, described by police as a suitcase, was located in a parking garage adjacent to the RTA hub, according to a statement from RTA. The hub reopened by about 11:15 a.m.

The next day, a suspicious package found outside the federal building in downtown Dayton. Security personnel found the package that had been dropped off at the front doors.

The package contained “no overt threats,” Dayton police Lt. Jason Hall said.

“Suspicious circumstan­ces presented in all three of these cases, and citizens/ first responders determined these items warranted further examinatio­n,” according to an email from the Dayton Bomb Squad. “It is a great relief that most of these incidents are discovered to be non-hazardous, but each has to be treated as life-threatenin­g until proven otherwise.

“We strongly encourage the public to report any suspicious situation they encounter so it can be properly evaluated,” the DPD said in the email.

The number of reported suspicious packages has increased in recent years, climbing from 2,785 in 2012 to 4,763 in 2015 according to the DO J.

The states that had the highest number of reported bomb threats in 2015 were Illinois, Texas, Ohio and Pennsylvan­ia, data shows.

 ?? FILE ?? A suspicious package found attached to a car Monday night near the Rusty Bucket at the Dayton Mall in Miami Twp. spurred an investigat­ion by the Dayton Bomb Squad.
FILE A suspicious package found attached to a car Monday night near the Rusty Bucket at the Dayton Mall in Miami Twp. spurred an investigat­ion by the Dayton Bomb Squad.

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