Posted on 10/21/2005 2:40:31 AM PDT by LibertyRocks
That might be why police officers are called 'blue canaries'. My EMT-in-training daughter learned the term from a trained EMT.
"Blue canaries" too funny! Don't they get training in this day and age to NOT smell stuff?
Nothing to see here, just a couple of college kids caught trying to cheat on mid-terms.
I don't know what the police are trained, if anything, about how to handle scenarios like that. I do know EMT's are trained in safety first.
Dead EMT's don't save lives.
They may have been the eco-terrorist ELF or ALF types that wanted to do an animal liberation or vandalize research labs that may use animals in research. Dounbt if it was related to the bombing.
I suspect an animal rights activist angle on this. Perhaps they stole samples of, say, hoof and mouth disease cultures with a view toward infecting cattle.
Ummm, I don't want to jump the gun before I get a chance to check him out, BUT ... the second name you posted, what was it, Thomas Kent Eldridge?
It may just be a coincidence, but I went to OU with Kent Eldridge, and I'm wondering if this is his son. Does it say? Because if it is Kent's son, that would have some significance.
Kent was the attorney for the pipe-bomb-on-the-plane OU student from summer, who was convicted or plead out about 3-4 days before Hinrichs blew himself up! Can't recall his name right at the moment.
George Cross. Duly noted.
Thanks for the thread, LibertyRocks.
Very interesting, Rte66.
Pinging others to your post #28.
I hope it was Steroids for the team. (They need it)
Are you referring to this?
OU student faces Aug. 31 hearing on federal charges
Dreyling still enrolled, has commercial pilot's license
The Norman Transcript
By Melissa A. Wabnitz
Transcript Staff Writer
A University of Oklahoma student accused of transporting an explosive device into Will Rogers World Airport in Oklahoma City last week is still enrolled and could begin classes at the Norman campus next Monday.
OU public affairs vice president Catherine Bishop confirmed Tuesday aviation senior Charles Alfred Dreyling Jr. is still a student. Dreyling is one semester away from completing an aviation management degree, according to his lawyer Kent Eldridge.
Bishop would not comment on whether the university was instituting its own disciplinary proceedings against Dreyling, as outlined in the OU student code handbook.
U.S. Department of Homeland Security documents obtained by The Transcript detail on Aug. 11, federal agents searched Dreyling's Norman residence. In the residence, the memo states, agents found "gunpowder, carbon dioxide cartridges and wires" as well as a computer with a video of detonation of a device similar to the one transported into the airport Aug. 10.
Norman Police Lt. Tom Easley confirmed the department's participation in the search but said he would not comment on the nature of the items removed from Dreyling's Norman residence, nor would FBI spokesperson Gary Johnson. One charge of attempting to carry an explosive or incendiary device was filed against Dreyling in the Western District of Federal Court in the State of Oklahoma. Eldridge said as far as he knows, prosecutors are not planning to file new charges against Dreyling.
Though an unidentified Homeland Security official wrote in the Aug. 12 memo the Transportation Security Administration is proceeding with a recommendation that the FAA revoke Dreyling's commercial license, no such actions have taken place said FAA spokesperson Roland Herwig. Dreyling received the license May 5.
"We have not performed any actions against (Dreyling)," Herwig said.
U.S. Attorney Robert McCampbell said "he was unable to comment on the matter."
A preliminary hearing is scheduled Aug. 31. Until that point, Eldridge said his client will continue to abide by the terms of his release, as he is "representing a fine young man."
"This has been quite a shock to him," Eldridge said. "He's never been in any kind of trouble before and we are waiting for the preliminary hearing."
Eldridge said the government is "admittedly, very concerned about what happened" at the airport and that his client has, and will continue to, cooperate with prosecutors and investigators.
Melissa A. Wabnitz 366-3550 mwabnitz@normantranscript.com
Hi Velveeta! :)
Hey, GMO!
Nice to see you. :-)
This thread has it all:
Manhole cover
tunnel
mystery chemical
explosives
airplanes
names you may or may not know
The 'E' name, Eldridge (?) reminds me of the 1970's
terrorist, think the name was Etheridge, a black panther?
It is all way too much to digest before the coffee is ready.
A good plot for a story. Or a jehad cell in Oklahoma.
LOL Don't forget the "Christopher Boyce" name connection... Mr. Boyce (not the guy arrested here) was the "Falcon" - the spy... Found that out doing a quick google - I remembered the movie from when I was growing up but wasn't familiar with the story.
IMHO, there are just too many weird things going on in Norman, OK for this all to be just "school violence" as Professor Sloan suggested in another article I posted today regarding security at the OU campus...
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1506485/posts
One can only hope it was something that innocuous... Even though acid can be dangerous.
I find it interesting that the paper didn't mention they were students, and there was no mention of what the vial contained - that's all pretty relevant to this story, IMHO. Don't know if it was just bad reporting or if they didn't want to call attention to the events - if they didn't want the attention though why report it at all?
Well that would be interesting. I can't find anything on Mr. Eldridge, and barely anything on Boyce using google. No student webpages (unless they've been taken down).
My daughter is a zoology major at OU. I'll have to
find out what's going on. She was kind of freaked out by the bombing a few weeks ago.
Yeah, I wonder if he was named after the guy or just a coincidence. Christopher is a popular name after all...
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