Scam leads to bomb scare in Bella Vista

NWA Democrat-Gazette/KENT MARTS Bentonville Bomb Squad bomb technician Ryan Simmons carries a portable X-ray system into the Bella Vista police station Thursday after a man carried a briefcase into the lobby. He told an officer that he might be the victim of a scam and the briefcase might contain a bomb.
NWA Democrat-Gazette/KENT MARTS Bentonville Bomb Squad bomb technician Ryan Simmons carries a portable X-ray system into the Bella Vista police station Thursday after a man carried a briefcase into the lobby. He told an officer that he might be the victim of a scam and the briefcase might contain a bomb.

BELLA VISTA -- When a man standing in the lobby of the police station Thursday told an officer the briefcase he had might contain a bomb that was part of a money scam, things moved fast.

Staff evacuated the station -- except for dispatch -- then the rest of the building, which houses the fire department and City Hall. The Bentonville Bomb Squad was called to the scene.

The bomb scare began to unfold when an 84-year-old Bella Vista resident walked into the lobby at 10:15 a.m. carrying a black briefcase. The man told the receptionist he thought he might have been scammed, Police Chief Ken Farmer said. Patrol officer Justin Green was interviewing the man when he said the briefcase might contain a bomb.

Bentonville police officer Ryan Simmons -- donning a heavy, dark-green bomb suit -- carried pieces of a portable X-ray machine into the building. The X-rays showed nothing dangerous in the briefcase, so Simmons used a screwdriver to pry open the locks.

Inside were stacks of newspapers. The June 22 issue of the Jewish Journal of south Florida was on top, according to detective Barb Shrum.

"When the bomb squad arrived and started messing with it, we thought it was best to not be in dispatch," Farmer said.

Benton County Central Communications handled 911 calls. Cencom relayed information to dispatchers who stood in front of City Hall equipped with cell phones and used portable radios to communicate with officers.

The scam, Farmer said, involved the man being told he'd won a large sum of money but needed to send payment for it. So he did. The package arrived, but then the victim was contacted and told to send more money to get the combination to the briefcase. He was warned the briefcase was booby trapped so that, if it was forced open, it would explode.

That's when he took the briefcase to the police station.

Farmer said a better response would have been to leave the possible booby trap where it was and call 911. Not only does that reduce the possibility of a real bomb going off while being driven somewhere, it also prevents the disruption of city government operations.

Farmer, who's been in law enforcement in Bella Vista for more than 30 years, said he couldn't recall a bomb scare at the station. There have been scares and threats at businesses, he said.

"Years ago, back during the anthrax scares, we had someone walk into the old police station on Huntley Lane, say they'd gotten a letter with white powder in it, then pushed the envelope through the slot into dispatch," Farmer said. "Things were pretty tense there for a little bit." The powder was harmless, he added.

Farmer said people always should be aware of offers that seem too good to be true.

"It's against the law for anyone to demand payment to claim a prize. That's an immediate red flag," he said. "If you're thinking it might be scam, don't send money. Give us a call."

General News on 07/20/2016