As jobs go, tech support at a university probably isn't a bad one. It probably doesn't pay a ton, but it's also probably pretty secure. I mean, students, professors, and admins will always need tech support. And, sure, the pressure's on, but maybe not the same pressures that would be in play in a business if, say, their online store was down and revenue and happy customers were at stake. Or in a hospital if patient records couldn't be accessed. (Which kidney am I removing???) Or any other scenario more crucial than a freshman who couldn't login to submit an assignment.
“And as soon as I opened it up [the case], all this energy and, like, these things come flying out,” he told authorities, according to the affidavit. “And I had a long sleeve shirt, and they flew up underneath, basically, and hit my arm. The case went up and then it came down.” (Source: Boston Globe)Duhaime's story ended up exploding in his face.
...investigators found no evidence of an explosion: “no small or sharp objects” were found in the case, or anywhere in the lab, according to the affidavit, and there was “no physical damage” to the case, Duhaime’s shirt, or the letter itself...
His injuries were superficial. He said the letter came from inside the exploding case, but it was found neatly folded and undamaged. Investigators later found a “word-for-word, electronic copy” of the letter stored in a backup folder on his computer, according to an FBI affidavit.Word-for-word, you say. Whoopsa-doopsa.
Duhaime is charged with conveying false information and hoaxes related to an explosive device and making material false statements to an executive branch of the US government, according to legal filings in US District Court in Boston.
Oh, and he no longer works at Northeastern.
Brilliant career move.
I'm sure he'll find work somewhere, at some point, for some rate of pay likely lower than what he made at Northeastern (which probably also came with some pretty good benefits). But it'll be a while before he's managing a new technology lab at a major university. If he was bored doing that, imagine the boredom level if he ends up answering Tier One IT help calls.
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