Imzadi
♥ Saved by an angel in a trench coat!
- Joined
- Oct 29, 2004
- Messages
- 40,725
Our Mayor announced about 6 weeks ago that another terrorist attack is imminent in NYC in the next 6 months.
Last night at 6:30, a street vendor saw smoke coming out of an abandoned SUV on 45th St, [correction ->] right next to the The Lion King theatre, across the street from the Marriott Marquis Hotel, down the block from a pedestrian park usually filled with hundreds of tourists sitting at any time, & and on the same block as 6 other Broadway theatres.
One of the mottos of NYC has become, "If you see something (suspicious,) say something, (to the police.)" The street vendor alerted a police officer on horseback, who gave a preliminary search, saw the smoke coming out of the back seats, the engine still running. He started evacuating the area & called in for backup police, who brought in the Counter-Terrorism task force & the bomb squad.
On a Saturday night, it was estimated there are thousands of people in Times Square at that time. People getting ready to go to the Broadway theatres, having dinner, out on dates, taking pictures of Times Square, etc. The area was quickly & semi-calmly evacuated of the thousands of people and is still in lock down as the bomb squad is now removing the deactivated bomb components.
They said we were lucky that it didn't go off. The bomb was very crudely put together and not done very well. (Thank God!) Kind of like that Christmas, airline underwear bomber.
CNN has the latest news:
http://www.cnn.com/2010/CRIME/05/02/times.square.closure/index.html?hpt=T1
Last night at 6:30, a street vendor saw smoke coming out of an abandoned SUV on 45th St, [correction ->] right next to the The Lion King theatre, across the street from the Marriott Marquis Hotel, down the block from a pedestrian park usually filled with hundreds of tourists sitting at any time, & and on the same block as 6 other Broadway theatres.
One of the mottos of NYC has become, "If you see something (suspicious,) say something, (to the police.)" The street vendor alerted a police officer on horseback, who gave a preliminary search, saw the smoke coming out of the back seats, the engine still running. He started evacuating the area & called in for backup police, who brought in the Counter-Terrorism task force & the bomb squad.
On a Saturday night, it was estimated there are thousands of people in Times Square at that time. People getting ready to go to the Broadway theatres, having dinner, out on dates, taking pictures of Times Square, etc. The area was quickly & semi-calmly evacuated of the thousands of people and is still in lock down as the bomb squad is now removing the deactivated bomb components.
They said we were lucky that it didn't go off. The bomb was very crudely put together and not done very well. (Thank God!) Kind of like that Christmas, airline underwear bomber.
CNN has the latest news:
http://www.cnn.com/2010/CRIME/05/02/times.square.closure/index.html?hpt=T1





It's always NYC.
The Mayor blows it off by saying terrorists go after symbols, and internationally, NYC represents freedom & all the great things about the U.S. so they will be coming after us here. But, dang! Leave my city alone!
That was our bomb."