Friday, 29 April 2016

Fox45 Baltimore offices evacuated after man in hedgehog suit makes bomb threat

A man who was dressed in a hedgehog suit was shot by a police sniper after threatening to blow up the TV station's Baltimore offices.


It was a harrowing experience for staff at a Baltimore TV news station on Thursday after a 25-year-old suspect from Howard County was shot by police after threatening to blow up the WBFF-TV news station in the 2000 block of West 41st Street in north Baltimore.

Reportedly the suspect was wearing the animal suit, described in the media as either a hedgehog or panda suit, with a hood, sunglasses, a surgical mask and a red vest that looked like a suicide bomb, but turned out to be made from chocolate candy bars.

The suspect first set his car on fire in the station’s parking lot before heading into the building, demanding the TV station air a story he had with him on a flash drive. While police wouldn’t confirm the contents of the flash drive, according to the station’s security guard, it related to government conspiracies and the recently released Panama Papers.

After being denied entry to the TV station’s lobby, the man then threatened to blow up the building. After spotting the red vest, which looked like a suicide bomb, security evacuated the building and called in the police. The suspect then managed to access the building.



Bomb squad and SWAT team arrive on the scene

Reportedly police, including the bomb squad and a SWAT team, arrived at the offices of the Fox affiliate at 1:20 p.m., after the suspect barricaded himself inside the building. A team of firefighters were on the scene to extinguish the flames coming from the gas tank of the suspect’s car and police officers barricaded the street before sending a negotiator into the building to address the suspect.

Matters became a little more serious when the man walked out of the building, followed by four officers. According to Baltimore police spokesman T.J. Smith, the suspect kept his hands in his pockets and there was a wire leading down his arm from the red “device” strapped to his chest.

Reportedly the man refused the officers’ orders to stop and remove his hands from his pockets, leading them to shoot.

"When you have a non-compliant individual, you have to do what you have to do," Smith said.

The man was shot by a Baltimore police counter sniper and went down in the middle of West 41st Street.

According to Smith, there were several shots fired but he couldn’t confirm exactly how many, and the suspect was still alive.

As officials feared the device strapped to the suspect’s chest was a bomb, they dispatched a robot to communicate with the man, who continued to refuse to obey police orders.


Reportedly after several minutes, the suspect was still lying in the street and medics were unable to tend to his injuries as he continued to refuse to take his hands from his pockets.

"He was described as conscious and alert, just uncooperative," Smith said. "He was saying no when we were asking him to comply."

Suspect disarmed and found to be wearing candy


When finally the man agreed to comply, the robot disarmed him of his vest, only to find it was not actually an explosive device. It turned out to consist of chocolate candy bars wrapped in aluminum foil, strapped to a motherboard and held together with wiring.

According to CBS Baltimore, while at the time the man’s identity was unknown, he was later identified by his father as 25-year-old Alex Prizzi. According to the Fox45 Twitter feed, the suspect has previously been seen in the same hedgehog suit at an anime event.

According to police, the investigation is still ongoing and Prizzi remains in a critical condition.

Source: CBSLocal Baltimore

Tuesday, 19 April 2016

Pop Culture Icon: Stephen Hawking Wants To Keep Up With The Kardashians?



Renowned astrophysicist Stephen Hawking says he can only achieve a "pop culture icon" status if he appears on the reality show, Keeping Up With The Kardashians.


While it was hopefully merely a joke, one of the world's most brilliant scientists said this when interviewed recently by ABC. 

ABC's World News Tonight anchor David Muir asked Hawking about his mentions in The Simpson’s, Star Trek, Pink Floyd and the Hollywood movie based on his life, saying, “How does it feel to be a pop culture icon?”

To this question the astrophysicist jokingly responded, "I won't feel like a true pop culture icon until I've been on the Kardashians."

Muir then told Hawking to be careful what he wishes for. Indeed!

Don't just take our word for it. Watch the video on the OK! website here.


Photo by NASA HQ PHOTO/CC BY-NC-ND 2.0

Friday, 8 April 2016

German Bomb Disposal Experts Defuse A Vibrating Sex Toy



After a strange buzzing noise was heard, emanating from a garbage bin in a gents' toilet in Halberstadt, Germany, the bomb squad came rushing to the rescue.


Germany, like many European countries, still has plenty of unexploded ordnance from World War II, found on a regular basis and defused by the trusty bomb disposal experts. This week, however, the brave men were called in for a totally different mission.

On Tuesday an emergency call came in from a video games arcade in Halberstadt after an employee raised the alarm. Said employee had heard the unusual buzzing sound coming from a bin in the gents’ toilets and was worried that it could be an explosive device.

Police evacuated the surrounding buildings and offices, with around 90 people ordered to leave the area for safety. They then cordoned off all the roads in the surrounding area.

Officials then called in the bomb disposal experts who entered the toilet and carefully lifted the lid off the garbage bin, only to find a sex toy, vibrating at its highest setting and laying at the bottom.

Unlike their more dangerous work, the bomb disposal squad had a much easier job than normal, deactivating the vibrating sex toy – they merely switched it off.

Within fifteen minutes, the security alert had been called off and everyone was allowed back into the area.
While the story might sound humorous, Chief Inspector Peter Hartmann of the local police explained that their actions were necessary and he defended his officers’ actions in calling in the bomb disposal experts.
“There are clear guidelines for situations like this which the police must follow.” 
“Caution is advisable in an unclear and potentially dangerous situation.”
However, while the alert turned out to be an embarrassing discovery for the brave bomb disposal squad, police in Halberstadt are not going to let things lie and are still going to investigate the matter.

Hartmann told reporters that it does appear the episode was not an innocent mistake and he believes the sex toy had been switched on for a reason.

 “It’s not clear who left the device there, but whoever it was certainly did so intentionally,” he said

Obviously with the recent terrorist attacks in Paris and Brussels, police can’t just leave matters to chance.

Source: Telegraph 
Photo via Flickr by Jonathan Harford /CC BY-NC 2.0