Author Topic: Source: Philly threat tied to website that Ore. shooter may have used  (Read 473 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

rangerrebew

  • Guest
   
Source: Philly threat tied to website that Ore. shooter may have used
 

JOE BRANDT, Daily News Staff Writer, brandtj@phillynews.com, 215-854-4890
Posted: Sunday, October 4, 2015, 8:06 PM

image: http://media.philly.com/designimages/partnerIcon-DailyNews-2014.jpg

Colleges and universities in and around Philadelphia are bolstering police patrols today after federal agencies notified them of a threat made on an Internet post.

The threat was posted Friday on 4chan, the same website that carried postings threatening a school in the "northwest" the day before nine people were slain at an Oregon college, a law-enforcement source with knowledge of the Philly threat confirmed to the Daily News.

"This is only the beginning, . . . " the Philly-area threat says. "On October 5, 2015 at 1:00 PM CT, a fellow robot will take up arms against a university near Philadelphia. His cries will be heard, his victims will cower in fear, and the strength of the Union will decay a little more."

On Thursday, Christopher Sean Harper-Mercer, 26, killed eight students and their English professor in a classroom at Umpqua Community College in Roseburg, Ore.
 
Local Universities On High Alert After Threat
 
Colleges warn about threat of violence

The night before that shooting, someone posted on 4chan: "Some of you guys are alright [sic]. Don't go to school tomorrow if you are in the northwest [sic]."

That was posted with a cartoon image of a frog with human characteristics holding a gun. The same image - adding a ski mask - appeared with the threat to the Philly-area schools posted Friday.

Temple University, the University of Pennsylvania, Drexel University and La Salle University all sent safety alerts on Sunday notifying students that the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco & Firearms and the FBI were aware of an unspecific threat directed at "a university near Philadelphia," that could happen at 2 p.m. Eastern Time Monday.

The post about Philadelphia, posted on 4chan's "ROBOT9001" or "r9k" board, says: "The first of our kind has struck fear into the hearts of America."

"If you are in that area, you are encouraged to stay at home and watch the news as the chaos unfolds," the post about Philly reads.

The 4chan site, a message board started in 2003 by 15-year-old Christopher Poole, is a spinoff of the Japanese website 2chan. Users start a thread with an image and invite discussion about topics segregated into boards about topics including anime, gaming, music, and several varieties of hentai pornography. It's the breeding ground of "Anonymous," the hacker/ protester collective.

Posts on the site have invited controversy before. In 2006, a user posted a detailed plan to detonate bombs at seven NFL stadiums on game day. The poster later served six months in prison.

"R9K" is powered by a script that prevents repeated posts from going on the site, forcing every post to be original.

Law-enforcement agencies have not released information about who made either the Oregon threat or the Philly threat.

Jong Lee, 20, a junior at Temple, told the Daily News on Sunday that he searched Google for some terms used in the university's alert, which was emailed to students. He soon found a website that archives old 4chan posts, and sent a screenshot to the People Paper.

Lee says he's still going to class today, and won't let the threat affect his routine.

Sean Collins, 19, a math major at Penn, said he's planning to go about his day as normal, although the 4chan post was "a little more upsetting" than the message Penn sent to students about the threat.

"It could be someone trying to get attention," he noted. But Collins is glad the police will be patrolling in greater numbers.

"They're doing, as far as we know, all they can with the information they have," he said.

Rebecca Uhl, a marketing major at Temple, isn't changing her routine either. When 2 p.m. rolls around, she'll be studying for a class at 2:30 p.m., she told the People Paper.

"It wasn't a tough decision," she said. "My professor takes attendance and it's an important class."

Read more at http://www.philly.com/philly/news/20151004_Source__Philly_threat_tied_to_website_that_Ore__shooter_may_have_used.html#MUXt6OJM519z7QHL.99

rangerrebew

  • Guest
Re: Source: Philly threat tied to website that Ore. shooter may have used
« Reply #1 on: October 05, 2015, 09:46:02 pm »
Whoa here!  Hold on one darn minute!  Philly has it all wrong.  They have more police going to these areas with weapons?    888ohnoes  Haven't they been listening to the anointed one? :Odance:  They should take guns from the police and declare Philly a gun free area!  Who in the hell is running this city?  It must be a republican if they aren't disarming. ***hair on fire

Offline massadvj

  • Editorial Advisor
  • *****
  • Posts: 13,366
  • Gender: Male
Re: Source: Philly threat tied to website that Ore. shooter may have used
« Reply #2 on: October 05, 2015, 09:51:04 pm »
I actually had a student e-mail me this morning to tell me she was skipping class because of this threat. 

Offline mountaineer

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 79,945
Re: Source: Philly threat tied to website that Ore. shooter may have used
« Reply #3 on: October 05, 2015, 09:51:22 pm »
All any terrorist wannabe has to do is post threats. Everyone will panic, curtail some more Constitutional rights, and essentially surrender - without a single shot being fired.
Support Israel's emergency medical service. afmda.org

Offline massadvj

  • Editorial Advisor
  • *****
  • Posts: 13,366
  • Gender: Male
Re: Source: Philly threat tied to website that Ore. shooter may have used
« Reply #4 on: October 05, 2015, 09:56:28 pm »
All any terrorist wannabe has to do is post threats. Everyone will panic, curtail some more Constitutional rights, and essentially surrender - without a single shot being fired.

Yep.  That's what I e-mailed back to the student. By your actions you give him a victory without having fired a shot.  I also talked about business being all about risk assessment and the fact that we was in greater risk of dying in a car accident on the way to class than in dying by a terrorist's hand.  But people don't process fear cognitively, unfortunately.

BTW, I did not conceal carry today.  Did not feel I needed to.