National News

Historically Black Colleges Disrupted by Bomb Threats

A series of unconfirmed bomb threats disrupted life at more than a dozen college campuses this week, drawing the attention of the White House and the FBI.
Posted 2022-02-01T19:55:46+00:00 - Updated 2022-02-02T01:00:14+00:00

A series of unconfirmed bomb threats disrupted life at more than a dozen college campuses this week, drawing the attention of the White House and the FBI.

Of particular concern were the threats directed at historically Black colleges and universities, or HBCUs, including at least 17 that temporarily canceled in-person classes and locked down buildings.

President Joe Biden was aware of the threats, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said at a news conference Monday.

“I will say that these are certainly disturbing,” Psaki said. “And the White House is in touch with the interagency partners, including federal law enforcement leadership, on this.”

The FBI said in a statement that it was “working with our law enforcement partners to address any potential threats.”

Authorities have so far not described any of the threats as credible. But school officials at many of the universities took precautions, such as sweeping campus buildings and moving to remote instruction. Some of the HBCUs have received several threats this year.

Rep. Val Demings, D-Fla., a former police chief, said on Twitter on Monday that the threats against historically Black colleges “demand a response.”

“As a former law enforcement officer I’ll keep working to make sure our institutions and law enforcement have the resources they need to keep all of our students and communities safe,” Demings said.

On Monday, at least seven HBCUs, including Southern University and A&M College in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and Delaware State University in Dover, Delaware, received bomb threats.

At least 10 other historically Black colleges, including Spelman College in Atlanta, reported threats Tuesday, the first day of Black History Month. The threats were made in the early hours of the day, according to several affected schools.

Tiara Sankar, a student at Hinds Community College, which closed four campuses in Hinds County, Mississippi, after a bomb threat, said Tuesday that she felt angry and fearful.

As she drove back home on a route that avoided campus, she thought of how the bomb scare had disrupted her education, forcing her to miss an entire day of classes.

“For us to be targeted like this, it makes me angry and hurt that this is still happening,” said Sankar, 22. “And mentally, it hurts, too.”

Anieya Green, a 19-year-old student at Xavier University in New Orleans, said that the bomb threat at her school should be taken seriously by officials.

“It doesn’t seem like a prank, and myself along with other peers are feeling targeted,” said Green, who missed two classes Tuesday because of the bomb threat.

At least four schools issued “all clear” messages by midday Tuesday, including Kentucky State University; Howard University in Washington, D.C.; and Jackson State University and Tougaloo College in Jackson, Mississippi.

At Bethune-Cookman University in Daytona Beach, Florida, a man who claimed to be in a neo-Nazi organization made a threat Monday to detonate bombs at the university, Chief Jakari Young of the Daytona Beach Police Department said at a news conference Monday.

Classes were canceled and authorities did not find bombs, police said.

Young said the FBI was investigating and following up with local officials so they could “connect the dots with the other threats that occurred” at other HBCUs.

Separately on Tuesday, UCLA said that all of its classes for the day would be remote “out of an abundance of caution” after some school staff received threats from a specific person. The school said that, according to law enforcement officials, the person was not in California and was “under observation.”

Investigations were still underway Tuesday morning at several of the historically Black colleges, including those that had received repeated threats this year.

“The threats are despicable,” Mary Schmidt Campbell, president of Spelman College in Atlanta, said in an email to students and staff members Tuesday. “They are designed to make us feel fearful and vulnerable.”

In a letter to Howard students and staff members Monday, Marcus Lyles, the school’s chief of police, said that while the recent threats against the university had not been credible, they were “a drain on institutional and municipal resources and an unnecessary mental burden on individuals trying to learn and work on our campus.”

At least eight HBCUs had also received threats Jan. 5. Many campuses were nearly empty because of winter break and the coronavirus pandemic, but dorm rooms and administrative buildings were still cleared out.

A week later, the University of Utah reported that its Black cultural center had also received a bomb threat.

The recent bomb threats at historically Black colleges and universities followed a series of unsubstantiated threats in November at several Ivy League schools as well as campuses in Ohio and California. Those threats were later deemed not to be credible. This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

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