The Horse Palace in Evanston, Wyoming, closed early Wednesday night after someone repeatedly called, saying there was a bomb in the business and telling staff âthereâs nothing you can do about it.â
Manager Chris Lloyd told Cowboy State Daily that a man called six times, threatening to have stashed a pipe bomb somewhere in the building, and that nobody would be able to find it.
âThey said there was one on the premises and thereâs nothing we can do about it,â he said. âThen he said some derogatory things, some not-so-nice language.â
Although the threats appear to have been empty, they were taken seriously.
Evanston Police Department Lt. Ken Pearson said his department responded and evacuated the Horse Palace, then cordoned off the area, including adjacent businesses.
With help from the Summit County Sheriffâs Office and its explosive-detecting K-9 officer, it was determined there was no bomb.
Out-Of-State Threat?
But that doesnât make the threats any less concerning for staff and customers, Lloyd said.
The first call came in at 9:05 p.m., he said, âThen they just wouldnât stop calling.â
There were âquite a few patronsâ in the Horse Palace at the time, and staff tried to let them know as calmly as possible they had to evacuate, Lloyd said.
Outside, he said police and employees were able to also get views inside the business through the surveillance cameras set up inside, he said.
âI heard âpipe bombâ was one of the terms (the caller) was using, and we were looking at the cameras to see if there was anything inside out of place,â he added.
While likely the threat come from out of state, thatâs difficult to nail down, Pearson said.
âIn todayâs day and age, and everybody moving around, they keep their cellphones,â he said, which means area codes may not mean a lot in determining where a call came from. âItâs kind of a crap-shoot.â
In the case of Wednesdayâs threats, âwe pinged the phoneâ but that âdidnât narrow it down.â
But he doesnât believe thereâs any ongoing danger or threat.
That the caller didnât say when the bomb was to go off âwas the unusual part about it,â Pearson said, adding there were other signs it was an empty threat.
âThere were a couple of red flags it was probably a hoax,â he said. âBut Iâd rather play it on the safe side.â
Greg Johnson can be reached at greg@cowboystatedaily.com.