Crime

Errant Newspaper Delivery Creates Bomb Scare at County Courthouse

Sheriff Rick Staly (right) helping monitor the situation from a mobile command unit. ⓒ Flagler County Sheriff's Office

What turned out to be a misplaced delivery of newspapers caused a brief bomb scare at the Kim C. Hammond Justice Center in Bunnell on Thursday. A rectangular box wrapped in a delivery bag containing a shipment of Palm Coast Observer papers resulted in a massive law enforcement response from the Flagler County Sheriff’s Office and Bunnell Police Department, as well as the summoning of the St. Johns County bomb squad.

The shipment was detonated as part of a training exercise, according to a subsequent statement released by Observer publisher Brian McMillan. “It all started with a lack of communication with a new driver,” the statement said. “This time, it happened to be an opaque gray, scented garbage bag, which made it appear suspicious.”

ADVERTISEMENT

The driver being new to the job, they evidently placed the shipment at the wrong building: the Kim C. Hammond Justice Center is across the facility from the Government Services Building, where the papers normally appear. A security check in the morning identified the shipment as suspicious, and a massive response went underway.

ⓒ Flagler County Sheriff’s Office

Sheriff Rick Staly made contact with McMillan as the conflict went on, suspecting it may be the Observer’s papers. Jonathan Lord, Director of the Flagler County Emergency Management Department, also received a similar shipment and confirmed that it was newspapers and not anything nefarious. Once the shipment of the courthouse was determined to be the Observer, the bomb squad blew it up anyway to get a training exercise in amid the chaos.

“Fortunately, this was a false alarm, but it still shows that our security protocols and training worked perfect in the event this had been proven to be a real danger,” said Sheriff Staly afterward. “I commend our Communications Center, Real Time Crime Center, and everyone involved to ensure the safety of our judges, courthouse staff, and citizens.”

“I apologize for the lack of training and communication that led to this happening,” McMillan added. “Lessons were learned, and we will do better at training new drivers.”

1 Comment

  1. TR

    March 11, 2024 at 4:32 pm

    Glad this turned out to be a mistake by mis communication. It could have been worse if it was a real bomb and people died or injured had it gone off. Better safe then sorry I guess.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

You May Also Like

Crime

The Flagler County Sheriff’s Office announced this week that two individuals had been arrested after gunshots were fired at the Econo Lodge in Palm...

Crime

Flagler Sheriff Rick Staly announced on Thursday that twelve alleged drug dealers had been arrested as a result of ‘Operation Silent Night’, an undercover...

Bunnell

A simple traffic stop for speeding in Bunnell on Monday quickly became a more serious encounter when the suspects were found to have narcotics...

Bunnell

Three suspects were arrested by the Flagler County Sheriff’s Office this week for entering a pregnant woman’s home and attacking her, according to a...

B Section

38-year-old Bunnell resident Tommy Banks was arrested by the Flagler County Sheriff’s Office last week for an unusual and violent home break-in that he...

Copyright © 2021 Flagler Publishing Group, LLC.

Exit mobile version