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Police: Woman carried fake bomb into airport

Officials arrest MIT student, who said device strapped to chest was art

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Student described as 'brilliant'
Sept. 21: WHDH's Victoria Block reports on Star Simpson, the 19-year-old MIT student who was arrested for allegedly wearing a fake bomb at Boston's Logan airport.

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updated 12:58 p.m. ET Sept. 21, 2007

BOSTON - Troopers arrested an MIT student at gunpoint Friday after she walked into Logan International Airport wearing a computer circuit board and wiring on her sweatshirt. Authorities call it a fake bomb; she called it art.

Star Simpson’s attorney said the charges against her were an overreaction, but authorities expressed amazement that someone would wear such a device eight months after a similar scare in Boston, and six years after two of the jets hijacked in the Sept. 11 attacks took off from Logan.

“I’m shocked and appalled that somebody would wear this type of device to an airport,” said State Police Maj. Scott Pare, the airport’s commanding officer.

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The terminal was not evacuated and flights were not affected, airport officials said.

Woman praised for robotics work
Simpson, 19, of Hawaii, has expertise in electronics and even received a Congressional citation for her work in robotics, according to her lawyer.

She wore the white circuit board on her chest over a black hooded sweatshirt, Pare said at a news conference. The battery-powered rectangular device had nine flashing lights, and Simpson had Play-Doh in her hands, he said.

Two phrases that looked hand-drawn — “Socket to me” and “Course VI” — were written on the back of Simpson’s sweatshirt, which authorities displayed to the media. Course VI appears to refer to MIT’s major of electrical engineering and computer science.

“She said that it was a piece of art and she wanted to stand out on career day,” Pare said.

There was a career fair at the university on Thursday, according to the university’s Web site.

Students gives not guilty plea
Simpson was charged with possessing a hoax device. A not guilty plea was entered for her and she was released on $750 bail.

During the hearing, Simpson smiled as she entered wearing a T-shirt and sandals. After she posted bail, she left in a taxi with a man who identified himself as her boyfriend, but neither would answer more questions from reporters.

Prosecutor Wayne Margolis had requested $5,000 bail, saying Simpson showed a total disregard for airport security concerns.

Ross Schreiber, who was appointed to represent Simpson, said she was not a risk to flee, cooperated with authorities and was a good student with no prior convictions. He said they would fight the charges.

“I would characterize it as almost being paranoid at this point,” he said of authorities’ response.

He said she had gone to the airport to meet her boyfriend. “She was there for legitimate purposes,” Schreiber said.


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