Skip to main content
Advertising

Originally published Wednesday, March 20, 2013 at 6:47 AM

  • Share:
           
  • Comments (0)
  • Print

W.Va. student free on $5K bond after bomb scare

A student at a West Virginia university who terrified classmates by using a fake bomb in a class presentation has been released from jail on bond.

The Associated Press

Most Popular Comments
Hide / Show comments
No comments have been posted to this article.
Start the conversation >

advertising

MORGANTOWN, W.Va. —

A student at a West Virginia university who terrified classmates by using a fake bomb in a class presentation has been released from jail on bond.

Harrison County Magistrate Frank DeMarco said Wednesday that 33-year-old Joshua John Richards was pleasant, cooperative and very remorseful when he appeared in court late Tuesday.

He says Richards, a student at Salem International University, kept saying he was only doing a school project and was sorry for how it turned out.

Richards is facing a misdemeanor charge of manufacturing and possessing a hoax bomb - in this case, a ticking black box with a blinking green light.

That's a misdemeanor punishable by six months to a year behind bars and a fine of up to $5,000.

He has requested a public defender and was freed on $5,000 bond.

News where, when and how you want it

Email Icon

Career Center Blog

Career Center Blog

How to talk yourself into a job


Advertising

Your free access has ended.

Subscribe today for unlimited access! Our introductory rate of only 99¢ a week includes:

  • Unlimited access to seattletimes.com
  • Seattle Times smartphone and tablet Web apps
  • Daily Print Replica -- an exact digital copy of the newspaper
Subscription options

Already a subscriber?

Digital access is already included with your print subscription!

Log in with your MyTimes account:
Subscriber login

If you've never used MyTimes:
Register your subscription