No Explosives In Starbucks 'Bomb'
Device Police 'Disarm' Turns Out To Be Flashlight Casing
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Bomb Found In S.F. Starbucks
Someone left an explosive in the bathroom of a Starbucks in San Francisco. As many as 100 people were evacuated from the area, reports Manuel Ramos.
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San Francisco police officers Dermot Dorgan, left, and Patrick Robinson, right, stand guard outside a Starbucks store as investigators search the interior after an explosive device was found in the store's bathroom in San Francisco, Monday, Jan. 9, 2006. (AP)
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A forensic analysis "revealed the absence of any explosive material," a police statement said.
At the time of the incident on Monday, the SFPD bomb squad had said the device found in the store's bathroom was definitely an explosive device and was powerful enough to seriously injure or kill someone if it had exploded.
Police evacuated about 100 people from the Starbucks and apartments above it before they set off a small charge to disarm it.
A man arrested on suspicion of planting an explosive device, Ronald Schouten, was still being held Thursday on an unrelated burglary charge. But police said his explanation on how the flashlight ended up in the coffee shop was credible.
Schouten, 44, told CBS Station KPIX-TV that he found the flashlight in the street and accidentally dropped it in the bathroom.
"I love that Starbucks," Schouten said in an interview with the station. "The people are saints. They know I'm homeless. They let me drink coffee for 50 cents. I love those people."
The station reported that the flashlight was filled with corroded batteries.
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