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Campus Alert Archive
SUNY Purchase

A Dorm Barbecue Dispute Sent Non-Student Jean-Pierre Filtcher Fleeing Into the Night and SUNY Purchase Into Lockdown

NYarmed personemergency notificationmedium confidence
Confirmed Threat

On Sunday evening, April 17, 2016, at approximately 8:45 PM EDT, reports of an armed person near a dormitory barbecue at SUNY Purchase College in Harrison, New York prompted a campus-wide lockdown; law enforcement from multiple agencies searched the campus for approximately three hours before determining it was safe at about 11:30 PM EDT. Jean-Pierre Filtcher, 24, of New Rochelle, who was not a student at the college, was arrested the following day and arraigned on charges of menacing, disorderly conduct, and obstructing governmental administration.

Alerts
3
Response
5 min
Killed
Injured
Institution
Purchase College, State University of New York
Public Bachelors · NY
~4,500 students
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

3 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 reconstruction234 chars
Purchase College Emergency Alert: Report of armed person on campus. Please shelter in place immediately. Close and lock doors, draw blinds. Stay away from windows. Law enforcement responding. Do not leave buildings. Updates to follow.

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

Reconstructed: Multiple outlets including ABC7 NY confirmed the university alerted students to 'stay indoors and close blinds' after reports of an armed suspect near a campus barbecue at approximately 8:45 PM EDT on April 17, 2016.
The 'close blinds' instruction is a detail-specific shelter-in-place protocol designed to remove potential targets from windows -- consistent with active-armed-person training post-Columbine.
UPDATESMS
Approximate reconstruction245 chars
Purchase College Emergency Alert: Law enforcement from multiple agencies is searching the campus. The shelter-in-place order remains in effect. No shots have been fired. Continue to remain in secure locations with doors locked and blinds closed.

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

Reconstructed: CBS New York confirmed that 'law enforcement officers from several agencies in the area converged on the campus' and that there were 'no reports of shots fired' during the search.
An update message explicitly stating 'no shots fired' is an important reassurance during an armed-person lockdown -- it reduces panic while maintaining the protective shelter-in-place order.
ALL CLEARSMS+2h 45m
Approximate reconstruction281 chars
Purchase College Emergency Alert: All clear. Law enforcement has determined the campus is safe. The shelter-in-place order is lifted. Buildings are open. There are no reports of shots fired. Normal campus operations resume. Be aware of increased law enforcement presence overnight.

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

Reconstructed: ABC7 and CBS New York both confirmed that police determined the campus was safe at approximately 11:30 PM EDT on April 17, 2016.
The three-hour lockdown window (8:45 PM to 11:30 PM) reflects the time required to search a 500-acre campus in darkness for a suspect who had already fled to Harrison.
Context

Background

Purchase College, SUNY, is a public liberal arts and sciences campus in the Town of Harrison, Westchester County, New York, set on a sprawling 500-acre campus. On Sunday evening, April 17, 2016, a dispute at a dormitory barbecue involving Jean-Pierre Filtcher, 24, of New Rochelle -- not a student at the college -- escalated to reports of an armed person on campus at approximately 8:45 PM EDT. The university immediately issued a shelter-in-place alert, directing students to stay indoors and close blinds. Law enforcement from multiple agencies converged on campus and searched for approximately three hours before determining the campus safe at about 11:30 PM; no shots had been fired. Filtcher had fled before the search was complete. He was arrested the next day and arraigned on charges of menacing, disorderly conduct, and obstructing governmental administration. The incident illustrates a recurring pattern at residential campuses: an external person accessing a campus social gathering triggers a full armed-person lockdown affecting thousands of residents. With a 500-acre campus, clearing every building and outdoor space in darkness required a multi-agency search of several hours. Normal classes resumed Monday morning.
Analysis

Key Findings

The suspect was a non-student who attended a dormitory barbecue, illustrating the access vulnerability at residential campuses where social events attract off-campus visitors
A 500-acre campus in the dark required a multi-agency three-hour search to confirm safety -- reflecting the scale challenge for armed-person response at large suburban campuses
The 'close blinds' instruction is a shelter-in-place protocol detail that reduces visual exposure of occupants to a potential external threat
Filtcher had fled the campus before law enforcement could apprehend him, meaning the all-clear was based on absence-of-threat confirmation rather than physical suspect containment
Outcome
No shots fired. Filtcher, a non-student, was arrested Monday and arraigned on menacing, disorderly conduct, and obstructing governmental administration charges. Campus cleared and reopened; normal classes resumed Monday.
Provenance

Sources

  1. News
  2. News
  3. News
  4. News
  5. News
Tags
armed-personshelter-in-placenon-studentlockdownnew-yorkwestchestermulti-agency-responsedormitorybarbecueliberal-arts
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion