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WKU

Suspicious Device, Then Yik Yak Threat: 'Next Bomb Will Be in PS2' — WKU Student Pleads Guilty to Terroristic Threatening

KYbomb threatemergency notificationhigh 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 September 14, 2022, Western Kentucky University evacuated Cherry Hall and several nearby buildings after a suspicious device was found. The ATF later determined the device was construction-related and not dangerous. Within minutes of that all-clear, a separate Yik Yak post threatening to bomb Parking Structure 2 was reported by a faculty member. WKU student Hailee Reed, 21, was arrested and later pleaded guilty to second-degree terroristic threatening.

Alerts
4
Response
Killed
0
Injured
0
Institution
Western Kentucky University
Public R2 · KY
~17,400 studentsWKU Alert
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

4 messages in sequence · 4 verified verbatim

INITIAL ALERTSMS
Emergency! A potential explosive device has been found at Cherry Hall Keep away from the area believed to be construction related.
Sent at 10:29 a.m. CDT on September 14, 2022 per the WKU emergency archive
Cherry Hall is the main administration and classroom building on the WKU campus, named after WKU's first president Henry Hardin Cherry
The fragment 'believed to be construction related' in the initial alert was a hedge that proved correct -- the ATF confirmed a large electrical fuse, not an explosive device
UPDATESMS+27 min
WKU Alert: All classes on the Bowling Green campus are suspended until further notice.
Sent at 10:56 a.m. CDT -- a separate class suspension alert following the initial device notification
Buildings affected by the evacuation included Cherry Hall, Van Meter Hall, The Commons, Gordon Wilson Hall, College High Hall, Faculty House, and Potter Hall
The suspension applied to the entire Bowling Green campus, not just buildings adjacent to Cherry Hall
ALL CLEARSMS+1h 38m
ALL CLEAR: ATF has determined the material found on campus was construction related and posed no threat to campus.
Sent at 12:07 p.m. CDT -- 98 minutes after the initial alert
The suspicious item was a large electrical fuse near a construction site, not an explosive device
ATF is credited by name in the all-clear, underscoring the federal agency's role in the determination
UPDATETwitter/X+1h 46m
There has been a bomb threat via social media in the area of Parking Structure 2. Stay out of the area. Police are on scene. Updates will follow.
Sent at 12:15 p.m. CDT -- only 8 minutes after the Cherry Hall all-clear
A WKU faculty member reported a Yik Yak post threatening a second bomb in Parking Structure 2 (PS2)
The post read: 'next bomb will be in ps2. y'all prepare yourselves' -- WKU Police traced it to 21-year-old student Hailee Reed via Yik Yak records
Context

Background

On September 14, 2022, Western Kentucky University experienced an unusually layered threat sequence. Around mid-morning, campus police received a report of a potential explosive device near Cherry Hall — the main administrative and classroom building on the Bowling Green campus — and the Faculty House. WKU Police evacuated those buildings and several adjacent ones, suspending classes campus-wide. The U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives determined the material was construction-related and posed no danger. Within minutes of that all-clear, a WKU professor reported a separate threat on the anonymous social media platform Yik Yak: 'next bomb will be in ps2. y'all prepare yourselves' — referring to Parking Structure 2. WKU Police investigated and traced the post to 21-year-old WKU student Hailee Reed of Stanford, Kentucky, who was arrested. Reed was initially charged with first-degree terroristic threatening — a Class C felony in Kentucky — and was released on a $6,000 cash bond. Reed later pleaded guilty in Warren Circuit Court to the reduced charge of second-degree terroristic threatening. The double-event nature of the day — a real construction scare and a separate copycat hoax — illustrates how anxiety from a real evacuation can prompt opportunistic threats from inside the campus community.
Analysis

Key Findings

WKU's September 14, 2022 incident is unusual for combining a real but harmless construction artifact with a separate, opportunistic social media threat from a current student
Hailee Reed's guilty plea to second-degree terroristic threatening (reduced from an initial first-degree charge) is one of the rare publicly documented prosecutions of a campus bomb threat hoaxer
Yik Yak's traceability — the platform retained logs that allowed police to identify Reed within hours — undermined the platform's reputation for anonymity
The case highlighted that not all campus bomb threats originate externally; current students sometimes capitalize on existing campus disruption to issue copycat threats
Outcome
No injuries; no actual explosive device — the suspicious item was a large electrical fuse near a construction site, which the ATF cleared. WKU student Hailee Reed of Stanford, KY, was arrested for the Yik Yak threat (initially charged with first-degree terroristic threatening) and later pleaded guilty in Warren Circuit Court to the reduced charge of second-degree terroristic threatening.
Provenance

Sources

  1. Official
  2. News
  3. News
  4. News
  5. Student Paper
  6. News
Tags
bomb-threatkentuckybowling-greenpublic-r2yik-yakstudent-suspectarrest-madeguilty-pleaterroristic-threateningcherry-hallconstruction-artifactHoax
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion