NORAD evacuated for 4.5 hours after packages arouse suspicions

NORAD evacuated 1,500 employees after employees discovered five suspicious packages. Staff were allowed back into NORAD after the packages were scanned and removed for further testing.

A visitor to NORAD walks past a 3-foot-thick, 25-ton blast door. The North American Aerospace Defense Command, NORAD, was evacuated today after employees found five packages that looked 'out of place.'

Rick Wilking/AP

March 7, 2013

NORAD headquarters in Colorado were evacuated for about 4-1/2 hours Thursday after employees found five suspicious packages; the command's control room team was working at a backup location about eight miles away at the time and no essential missions were disrupted, officials said.

Employees became suspicious because something about the packages looked "out of place," said Jeff Bohn, a spokesman at Peterson Air Force Base in Colorado Springs, where the North American Aerospace Command is based.

Mr. Bohn declined to say what the packages looked like or what appeared to be amiss.

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Tests performed on the packages ruled out chemical, biological, and radiological agents, Bohn said. The packages were then removed and were undergoing other tests, he said.

Bohn said he did not know how the packages arrived or whether they had been screened before they were delivered. He said that would be part of the investigation.

NORAD is a joint US-Canadian command that defends the skies over both nations and monitors sea approaches.

About 1,500 people were evacuated from the headquarters building.

NORAD's control-room team was operating at a backup location inside Cheyenne Mountain because renovations were under way in the building on Peterson Air Force Base, said Navy Capt. Jeff Davis, a NORAD spokesman.

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The Cheyenne Mountain site, carved out of the mountain in the 1960s to withstand a nuclear attack by the Soviet Union, used to be the primary control room.

In 2006, NORAD began preparations to move the control room to its current location on Peterson, saying it would save money and consolidate personnel. The Cheyenne Mountain control room is kept on standby for backup use.

NORAD shares its headquarters building with the US Northern Command, which is responsible for defending US territory from attack and helping civilian authorities.

Officials said essential Northern Command operations were not interrupted.