http://www.securityinfowatch.com/article/article.jsp?id=5876
<http://www.securityinfowatch.com/article/article.jsp?id=5876&siteSection=30
6> &siteSection=306
  

Updated: October 5th, 2005 12:44 PM EDT



U. of Oklahoma: New Security Measures to Follow Bombing

Screening of bags, vehicles, addition of undercover officers planned in
response to suicide bombing
Sean Murphy
Associated Press


NORMAN, Okla. -- The University of Oklahoma will tighten security at
Oklahoma Memorial Stadium after a student with explosives attached to his
body died in a blast within 100 yards of thousands of fans watching a
football game there, the school's president said Tuesday.

Security personnel will more thoroughly search bags fans bring to the
stadium, OU President David Boren said. The school will suspend for the rest
of the season a policy that allows spectators to return after leaving at
halftime, and officers will more closely screen vehicles that park in a
garage next to the stadium.

"(Fans) should be prepared to come a little earlier and be patient with us,
knowing that it's only for their own safety that we're being very, very
thorough," Boren said.

Additional officers, both uniform and undercover, also will be scattered
throughout the stadium.

"I would not be at all surprised that we would have more law enforcement
agents inside the stadium than we would normally have," Boren said. "These
will probably not be visible to the fans, because we probably won't be
putting them in uniform."

Joel Henry Hinrichs III, 21, died Saturday when a device attached to his
body exploded about 7:30 p.m. as he sat on a bench outside George Lynn Cross
Hall. The blast could be heard inside the stadium where more than 80,000
people attended OU's game against Kansas State.

Cameras are positioned at locations throughout the stadium and on campus,
but Boren said none of them captured the explosion.

Boren said authorities continue to believe that Hinrichs did not try to get
into the stadium and that he acted alone. He said Hinrichs' roommate, along
with his acquaintances, were questioned by federal authorities.

"All the people who lived in that building, all the people that lived in the
building surrounding it, all the people who knew him well or were living in
proximity to him ... have been questioned; none of those people have been
held by law enforcement," Boren said.

Hinrichs' father, Joel Hinrichs, Jr., of Colorado Springs, Colo., has said
he's confident his son didn't intend to harm others and wasn't motivated by
a political agenda. He said no suicide note was found, but that the evidence
points clearly to suicide.

Boren also confirmed that law enforcement officers found dangerous materials
in Hinrichs' apartment on campus and detonated this material at the police
bomb range.

The Oklahoma Sooners return to the stadium on Oct. 22 when they play Baylor.
They play Texas in the Cotton Bowl in Dallas on Saturday.

Boren said he expects tighter security for the OU-Texas football game, and
that information about the bombing has been forwarded to Texas officials.

"I'm sure they'll be stepping it up like we will be, but beyond that I don't
know," Boren said.

(c) 2005 Associated Press



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