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Student Is Charged In Harvard Bomb Scare

University police, FBI agents and Cambridge, Mass., officers all responded on Monday when Harvard received messages claiming that bombs had been planted in four buildings. None were found and a student has been charged in the hoax. he allegedly wanted to avoid taking a test.
Josh Reynolds
/
AP
University police, FBI agents and Cambridge, Mass., officers all responded on Monday when Harvard received messages claiming that bombs had been planted in four buildings. None were found and a student has been charged in the hoax. he allegedly wanted to avoid taking a test.

The initial suspicion of many — that Monday's bomb scare at Harvard University was the work of a student who wanted to avoid taking a test — may have been correct.

"A Harvard University student who was allegedly trying to get out of a final exam has been charged with making bomb threats that led to the evacuation of four campus buildings and the cancellation of some final exams Monday," our colleagues at WBUR report.

They've posted a copy of court papers filed by the FBI in which Special Agent Thomas Dalton alleges that the student, 20-year-old Eldo Kim of Cambridge, Mass., sent four emails to officials at the school Monday morning. Each message, Dalton writes, said:

"shrapnel bombs placed in:

"science center

"sever hall

"emerson hall

"thayer hall

"2/4. guess correctly.

"be quick for they will go off soon"

According to the court papers:

-- The emails' author had used "a service called Guerrilla Mail, an Internet application that creates temporary and anonymous e-mail addresses available free of charge."

-- "Further investigation yielded information that the person who sent the e-mail messages accessed Guerrilla Mail by using a product called TOR, which is also available free of charge on the Internet and which automatically assigns an anonymous Internet Protocol ('IP') address that can be used for a limited period of time."

-- "Harvard University was able to determine that, in the several hours leading up to the receipt of the e-mail messages described above, ELDO KIM accessed TOR using Harvard's wireless network."

When the FBI and campus police interviewed Kim on Monday evening, the FBI agent's account adds, Kim "stated that he authored the bomb threat e-mails. ... According to KIM, he was motivated by a desire to avoid a final exam scheduled to be held on December 16, 2013."

Kim is due to appear in a federal court in Boston on Wednesday. He's charged with making bomb threats and if convicted could be sentenced to as much as five years in prison.

The student-run Harvard Crimson says Kim is a sophomore. The Crimson writes that:

"On Saturday night, Kim sent an email over the Quincy [Hall] email list timestamped 9:58 p.m. under the subject line, 'Has anyone taken GOV 1368 The Politics of American Education?'

" 'I was wondering if anyone had taken GOV 1368: The Politics of American Education (Paul Peterson) in the past,' Kim wrote in the email. 'I have several quick questions about the course.'

"The final for Government 1368 was scheduled to take place at 9 a.m. on Monday in Emerson 210 and was among the exams evacuated Monday morning following the bomb threat. TheCrimson could not immediately confirm if Kim was enrolled in the course."

The FBI's court papers, though, indicate that it was indeed the Government 1368 exam that Kim may have wanted to avoid:

"KIM was scheduled to take a final exam in Emerson Hall, a building on the Harvard campus, at 9:00 a.m. on December 16, 2013. KIM stated that he was in Emerson Hall at 9:00 a.m. when the fire alarm sounded and the building was evacuated. According to KIM, upon hearing the alarm, he knew that his plan had worked."

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

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Mark Memmott is NPR's supervising senior editor for Standards & Practices. In that role, he's a resource for NPR's journalists – helping them raise the right questions as they do their work and uphold the organization's standards.