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Bombs found at U of Oklahoma, blast kills one
NORMAN, Okla. - One person was killed in an explosion near a packed football stadium at the University of Oklahoma on Saturday night in what authorities said appeared to be a suicide.
The blast, in a traffic circle about 100 yards from Oklahoma Memorial Stadium, could be heard by some in the crowd of 84,000, but university President David Boren said no one inside the stadium was ever in danger. “We are apparently dealing with an individual suicide, which is under full investigation,” Boren said in a statement. There was no information about the person who was killed, and no reports of any other injuries. A police bomb squad detonated explosives found at the site of the blast. The area near the stadium was searched by bomb-sniffing dogs. Jaclyn Hull, an OU freshman who left the game shortly before the explosion, said she saw “a little bit of smoke, about as much as you would see coming up from a grill.” Officers cordoned off an area west of the stadium after the explosion and nobody was allowed out of the stadium for about a half-hour after the blast, which occurred shortly before 8 p.m., about halftime of the Sooners’ game against Kansas State. The game continued. http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/9557879 |
For those familiar with OU's campus: the bombing occurred at the south end of the South (Van Vleet) Oval, near the botany-microbiology building. It's a very short walk from there to the west stands of the stadium.
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We were at the theatre at the Northwest side of the North Oval at the time the bomb went off. We didn't hear it.
The first word after the performance was that there was a "suicide bombing." It was pretty obvious upon walking outside that it wasn't -- at least as we have come to understand the word. It was a suicide using a bomb. A subtle difference in language, but a huge difference in meaning. While the police sealed off the South Oval, there was no presence on the North Oval at all. Clearly, nobody really considered this incident as a big threat to the campus. A bomb Haz/Mat disposal unit which was on hand for the O.U. football game (which was in the first half when the bomb went off -- not far from the stadium) reportedly destroyed something else found on the oval, reportedly using a robot -- but it's a little unclear to me whether it was another explosive device or just a suspicious package. According to the OKC newspapers this morning, the stadium and area around it had been swept by trained K-9 teams before the game, and the K-State team busses were checked out by the dogs before the team embarked after the game. The blast was clearly heard by those in the stadium and police and security were said to have "streamed" out of the stadium. Nobody else was allowed to leave the stadium at halftime and everyone was made to leave through the East gates after the game. Both teams had extra security as they left the stadium. We drove by the Oval/Stadium after a late, post theatre, dinner last night and there were police and fire units on the scene, but not nearly as many as you have expected. When we drove by the stadium and the South end of the South Oval today on the way to the airport, the area was still sealed off and there was probably a daytime sweep in progress. |
I was sitting in the south end zone part of the stadium. I heard the blast. It reminded me of the Murrah bombing blast.
From what I understand, this guy seems to have intended to enter the stadium. |
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Reports are that the kid was 'disturbed' to say the least. |
The local media (before I left for home yesterday) was kind of hedging on whether there was really another "device" or whether they just found a package of some sort and destroyed it just to be safe -- which is what they tend to do these days.
That's why I wondered. |
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I can't say that I've kept up with it since then. They weren't very informative to those of us watching the game :) |
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As if he could possibly know. |
Who won?
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It turns out that the young man who committed suicide was a National Merit Scholar from Colorado Springs and was described by his former teachers on local news last night as "brilliant," but also a loner, etc. -- all of the things we here about troubled youth.
It was pretty heart-wrenching to see his father, who also seems very bright, interviewed saying that he believes that his son chose a place far enough away from everyone else so nobody but he would be hurt. Of course we'll likely never know if that's true or not. Since the deceased was a member of the National Scholars program and from Colorado, our son has had all of the usual questions about if he knew him. He didn't, although they probably were recruited the same year. |
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None of this I've been able to confirm through credible sources -- it seems that law enforcement has been pretty silent thus far except that he did try at one point to purchase some ammonium nitrate (same as what was used in the OKC bombing 10 year ago). |
The problem with this story is that the rumors ran rampant immediately -- as you might expect in a "society" such as a college campus.
It'll probably just fade away with little or know comment from the University or other authorities. Silence is golden. |
http://newsok.com/video/1634836/
Disturbing. It appears that the rumor that the kid attended the same mosque as one Zacharias Mussoui (sp) were true. He made two attempts to enter the stadium during the game. There may have been a conspiracy by his roommates (one a Pakistani) to move things out of the apartment before authorities arrived. There was an airline ticket found for a "future date" to Algeria among Hinrich's belongings. It certainly looks like a duck to me. |
^^^The whole thing was fishy from jump. So you want to kill yourself, but you chose a bomb, the same tactics that suicide bombers use? :rolleyes:
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