Government Skeptical of Bomb Threats to Seven NFL Stadiums
This article is from the archive of The New York Sun before the launch of its new website in 2022. The Sun has neither altered nor updated such articles but will seek to correct any errors, mis-categorizations or other problems introduced during transfer.

WASHINGTON — A Web site is claiming that seven NFL football stadiums will be hit with radiological dirty bombs this weekend, but the government yesterday expressed doubts about the threat.
The warning, posted October 12, was part of an ongoing Internet conversation titled “New Attack on America Be Afraid.” It mentioned NFL stadiums in New York, Miami, Atlanta, Seattle, Houston, Oakland and Cleveland, where games are scheduled for this weekend.
The Homeland Security Department alerted authorities and stadium owners in those cities, as well as the NFL, of the Web message but said the threat was being viewed “with strong skepticism.” Officials at the NCAA, which oversees college athletics, said they too had been notified.
A Homeland Security spokesman, Russ Knocke, said there was no intelligence that indicated such an attack was imminent, and he said the alert was “out of an abundance of caution.”
“The department strongly encourages the public to continue to go about their plans, including attending events that involve large public gatherings such as football games,” Knocke said.
The FBI also expressed doubt about the threat.
“While the credibility of the threat is questionable, we have passed the information on because it has been carried in some open source reporting,” an FBI spokesman, Richard Kolko, said. He said the FBI was discussing the threat with the NFL as “part of our routine discussions this week.”
An NFL spokesman, Greg Aiello, said stadiums around the country “are very well protected through the comprehensive security procedures we have in place, including secure facility perimeters, pat-downs and bag searches.”
Officials were made aware of the Web posting on October 16. The threat was timed to be carried out on Sunday, October 22, marking the final day in Mecca of Ramadan, the Islamic holy month.
“The death toll will approach 100,000 from the initial blasts and countless other fatalities will later occur as result from radioactive fallout,” according to a copy of the posting that was obtained by the Associated Press.
The bombs, according to the posting, would be delivered to the stadiums in trucks.All but one of the stadiums — Atlanta — are open-air arenas, the posting noted, adding: “Due to the open air, the radiological fallout will destroy those not killed in the initial explosion.”
Explosions would be nearly simultaneous, the posting said, with the cities specifically chosen in different time zones.