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Shorter

'A White Van': How a Pre-emptive Bomb Sweep Cleared a Two-Year HBCU After a Specific Vehicle Threat

ARbomb threatemergency notificationmedium confidence
Confirmed HoaxDetermined to be a hoax. The institutional response is documented because it reveals how the alert system performed under a perceived real threat.

On February 1, 2022, Shorter College in North Little Rock was named in a 1:35 AM CST 911 call by a self-described neo-Nazi who claimed to have placed a vehicle bomb in a white van on campus. North Little Rock Police, the FBI, and Shorter Campus Security conducted what college president Jerome Green called a 'pre-emptive bomb sweep' of the campus. No devices were found, and operations resumed.

Alerts
2
Response
Killed
Injured
Institution
Shorter College
Hbcu · AR
~350 studentsShorter College Emergency Notification
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

2 messages in sequence

Some alert texts below are approximate reconstructions from news coverage, not confirmed verbatim transcripts. Reconstructed texts are shown in italic with a dashed border. Verified verbatim texts have a solid border and are marked accordingly.

INITIAL ALERTSMS
Approximate reconstructionKATV coverage of the Little Rock HBCU bomb threats172 chars
Shorter College Emergency: Bomb threat received targeting our campus. Police and FBI conducting sweep. Do not come to campus. Stay clear of all vehicles. Updates to follow.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

The threat referenced 'a vehicle bomb in a white van' — the only specific vehicle-targeting threat in the three-HBCU 911 call, requiring a different sweep methodology than the building-focused C-4 sweep at Philander Smith and Arkansas Baptist
Reconstructed from media reporting; the verbatim short-code SMS text was not preserved in a publicly accessible Shorter College archive
Shorter College is a small two-year HBCU with approximately 350 students, making it one of the smallest institutions in the 2022 HBCU bomb threat wave
ALL CLEAREmail
Approximate reconstructionTHV11 coverage of the Shorter College all-clear324 chars
Shorter College Emergency Update: All clear. The City of North Little Rock Police Department and the FBI have completed a pre-emptive sweep of campus, including all parked vehicles. No suspicious devices were located. Normal operations will resume. We are grateful for the proactive response from local and federal partners.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

President Jerome Green's specific quote — 'we are very grateful that the city of North Little Rock, the police department and the FBI were very proactive and responsive to come out and conduct a pre-emptive bomb sweep on the campus' — is captured in the [THV11 reporting](https://www.thv11.com/article/news/crime/police-little-rock-hbcu-bomb-threats/91-58633b8b-ac4d-4a8d-b1f3-5ae28f80e368)
Reconstructed from official statements summarized in media reports; Shorter's small operational footprint means no preserved alert archive is publicly accessible
The phrase 'pre-emptive bomb sweep' is unusual official language: it frames the response as cautious investigation rather than emergency response, suggesting Shorter's leadership viewed the threat with skepticism even as they took it seriously
Context

Background

Shorter College is a small two-year private HBCU in North Little Rock, Arkansas, with roughly 350 students — one of the smallest HBCUs in the country. On February 1, 2022, the college was specifically named in a 1:35 AM CST 911 call to Little Rock dispatch by a self-described neo-Nazi who claimed to have planted a vehicle bomb in a white van on the campus, alongside C-4 charges at Philander Smith and Arkansas Baptist colleges in Little Rock. North Little Rock Police, the FBI, and Shorter campus security conducted a joint sweep that the college's president, Jerome Green, characterized as a 'pre-emptive bomb sweep' — a notably skeptical framing that contrasts with the urgent language at larger HBCUs. No devices or suspicious vehicles were located. The threat was part of a coordinated wave that hit at least a dozen HBCUs that morning, all on the first day of Black History Month. The FBI later identified six juveniles as persons of interest in the broader campaign. A July 2022 incident at Shorter — when an actual incendiary device was reported on campus — was investigated by NLRPD as a possible follow-up, illustrating how the February threat reshaped how Shorter approached subsequent suspicious-package reports.
Analysis

Key Findings

Shorter College's threat was uniquely specific — naming a 'white van' on campus — requiring vehicle-by-vehicle sweep methodology different from the building-focused sweeps at the other two named HBCUs
President Jerome Green's framing of 'pre-emptive bomb sweep' is a rare example of HBCU leadership publicly characterizing the response as cautious investigation rather than emergency response
Shorter's small two-year status (~350 students) means it operates with significantly less alert infrastructure than larger HBCUs — yet was targeted in the same coordinated call as much larger institutions
A July 2022 incendiary-device incident at Shorter was investigated as a possible follow-up, suggesting the February threat permanently shifted Shorter's threat-assessment baseline
Outcome
No explosive devices or suspicious vehicles were located on Shorter College's campus during the joint NLRPD-FBI-campus security sweep. President Jerome Green publicly thanked the City of North Little Rock and the FBI for their proactive response. Shorter, a small two-year HBCU, was uniquely targeted with a vehicle-bomb claim — a more specific threat than the C-4 charges named at the two Little Rock HBCUs in the same call.
Provenance

Sources

  1. News
  2. News
  3. News
  4. News
  5. News
  6. News
Tags
bomb-threathbcushorter-collegearkansasnorth-little-rocktwo-year-collegevehicle-bomb-claimblack-history-monthsmall-hbcupre-emptive-sweepHoax
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion