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Student charged in museum bomb hoax granted bail

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CTV Toronto: Chris Eby reports the bomb hoax suspect
WATCH the YouTube video entitled 'The fake bombing at the ROM, Toronto, 28.11.07'

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toronto.ctv.ca

Date: Fri. Nov. 30 2007 6:19 PM ET

A Toronto art student charged in connection with a bomb hoax at the Royal Ontario Museum that triggered an evacuation and cancelled a prestigious AIDS fundraiser has been granted bail.

Thorarinn Ingi Jonsson, 24, an Icelandic citizen, appeared in court on Friday on charges of common nuisance and mischief interference with property.

The third-year student at the Ontario College of Art and Design in Toronto was released on $33,000 bail.

Jonsson's lawyer, Robert Rotenberg, told reporters his client comes from a "very creative family." Jonsson's mother is an established sculptor and his father is a well-known TV personality, Rotenberg said.

Police are still investigating whether the fake pipe bomb was part of an art project. The lead investigator in the case said the incident is "a big deal."

"We see it as an individual who planted this device in a museum, in a public place, and it impacted a lot of police resources and members of the public," Det. Leslie Dunkley told reporters.

"It is a big deal when you tie up police resources, emergency resources and you're blocking off traffic, affecting members of the community."

Dunkley said such acts should be denounced so members of the public don't imitate them.

The accused's friend, however, said the act wasn't meant to cause concern, and the incident has been blown out of proportion.

"The public outcry is against this 'monster' who cancelled an AIDS benefit," the man who identified himself as Dan told reporters.

"He didn't know there was going to be an AIDS benefit. It's not a statement against AIDS benefits, it's a statement against our culture of fear."

College hands out suspensions

OCAD announced Thursday that it had suspended one of its students. Two teachers were also suspended with pay, pending an investigation. The institution said that the act wasn't part of any school assignment or course.

"This incident at the ROM was totally unacceptable and is in no way condoned by OCAD," the school said in a statement.

"The university has taken this matter very seriously and is conducting a full and thorough investigation in co-operation with the police."

The college didn't elaborate as to why the instructors were suspended, but noted they have been co-operative.

A suspicious package labelled "This is not a bomb" was discovered inside the museum's lobby at about 6 p.m. on Wednesday.

The discovery prompted police to shutdown traffic in the surrounding area and to evacuate half of the museum.

The investigation cancelled a fundraiser organized by the Canadian Foundation for AIDS Research. More than 2,000 people were expected to attend the event, for which tickets cost $600 apiece.

A short time later, a video depicting an explosion inside the museum was posted on YouTube entitled "The fake bombing at the ROM, Toronto, 28.11.07."

The video, which suggested at least two people staged the event, was also sent to media outlets.

The grainy footage shows a woman taking photos outside the Michael Lee-Chin Crystal. She enters the museum and turns to the camera where she is instructed to say hi to her mother.

A loud bang can then be heard, the woman falls out of the shot and the camera cuts to black with the sounds of screaming in the background.

Jonsson turned himself in to police on Thursday night.

With a report from CTV's Chris Eby

Comments are now closed for this story

Dan
said

This is the equivalent of someone yelling Hi Jack, as opposed to hijack, on a plane, and claiming it was innocent.


g.
said

Isn't this the same school that the two guys that were charged with killing and torturing kensington the cat (all of course in the name of art)went to?

and didnt they do some horrid art 'piece' involving baby chicks while there as well?

hmmm.... seems these kids better stick to nude sketching and bowls of fruit, much safer for us all.... lol


Reza
said

OMG, this is absolutely hillarious

How paranoid we've become as people! !

Well, this is what we gotta do if we don't want to let the terrorists win P:


Mark
said

Putting a label on a box saying "This is not a bomb" is no excuse to claim that police should have acted differently. Who is to say some sick individual would not do this to a real bomb, causing someone to attempt to move/open it and then have it explode.

Scott
said

Fine them $1.2 million + the cost of the emergency response for their "art".


Sanjay Singh
said

This isn't the first time someone from Ontario College of Art and Design has courted controversy.

I just checked, and it was a student from there that tortured and killed that stray cat on video back in 2001. Type in "Kensington cat" or "Jesse Power" to re-aquaint yourself with that situation from long ago.


Douglas Morgan
said

In this day and age this has to be taken seriously, and so do the consquences. ... That way people might think twice before being so foolish.


Jeff
said

What kind of a person would think this is "hilarious" when the people affected by this so called "art hoax", are people with AIDS? CANFAR lost $100, 000 as a result of this sad affair. As a person employed by the arts, throw the book at culprit.


Dennis
said

Not sure why anyone would find this funny. Also not sure why anyone would think the police response to this incident was excessive or paranoid. The police response was not very different from what it would have been prior to 9-11-01 either. A package that appears to be a bomb must be dealt with accordingly for public safety. A hoax deserves nothing less than charges, prosecution, jail time and restitution.


Thomas Chan
said

What an act of stupity and selfishness caused the unecessary postphonement of an important event with good cause.


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