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Campus Alert Archive
Harvard

A 2:48 AM Firework in a Goldenson Locker: Harvard's Most Boston-Marathon-Echo Timely Warning

MAhazmattimely warninghigh confidence
Confirmed Threat

At 2:48 AM EDT on Saturday November 1, 2025, a Harvard University Police Department officer responding to a fire alarm at the Goldenson Building at 220 Longwood Avenue observed two unidentified individuals fleeing the building and discovered evidence of an explosion on the fourth floor. The Boston Fire Department Arson Unit determined the explosion appeared to be intentional, and HUPD issued a Clery timely warning the same day. No injuries occurred; two young men later admitted to detonating a commercial-grade firework in a locker as a prank.

Alerts
1
Response
Killed
0
Injured
0
Institution
Harvard University
Private R1 · MA
~23,731 studentsMessageMe
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

1 message in sequence · 1 verified verbatim

INITIAL ALERTEmail
At approximately 2:48 AM on November 1, 2025, a Harvard University Police Department officer was dispatched to the Goldenson building at 220 Longwood Avenue, Boston, for a fire alarm activation. Upon arrival at the building, the officer observed two unidentified individuals fleeing the building. The officer attempted to stop the individuals before proceeding to the floor where the alarm had been triggered. Upon entering the building, the officer determined that an explosion had occurred in an area on the 4th floor. The Boston Fire Department Arson Unit responded and made an initial assessment that the explosion appeared to be intentional. The Boston Police Department conducted a sweep of the building to check for any additional devices; none were found. No injuries were reported as a result of this incident.
Issued as a Clery Act timely warning under the categorization of an arson or explosive incident on a building receiving federal financial assistance
The Goldenson Building houses Harvard Medical School neurobiology research laboratories — the explosion occurred on the fourth floor outside a lab, in a hallway locker
The decision to release the warning as a written HUPD bulletin rather than a MessageMe SMS reflected that the threat had already been contained by the time the warning was issued; community members were not in active danger
The phrase 'observed two unidentified individuals fleeing the building' became the basis for the FBI and HUPD photographic appeal that led to identifying Patterson and Cardoza within 72 hours
Context

Background

The November 1, 2025 explosion in Harvard Medical School's Goldenson Building at 220 Longwood Avenue is the most significant Harvard-affiliated arson investigation of the post-Marathon-bombing era. At approximately 2:48 AM EDT, an HUPD officer responding to a fire alarm at the building observed two individuals fleeing and subsequently discovered evidence of an explosion on the fourth floor. The Boston Fire Department Arson Unit deemed the blast intentional. HUPD issued a Clery timely warning later that day describing the response sequence and a photographic appeal for the two suspects. The investigation moved quickly: Logan David Patterson, 18, and Dominick Frank Cardoza, 20, were arrested by federal agents on November 4, 2025 and charged with conspiracy to damage by fire or explosive a building receiving federal financial assistance. In April 2026, both pleaded guilty — their attorneys characterized the act as 'doing stupid things' rather than ideological violence, and the men admitted to detonating a commercial-grade firework in a locker outside a lab. The case is notable for this archive because Harvard chose a written HUPD timely warning rather than a MessageMe SMS push — consistent with Harvard's general preference for written advisories when the threat has been contained — and because the post-Marathon-bombing protocol (rapid federal involvement, FBI assistance, immediate photographic appeal) was applied to what turned out to be a fireworks prank rather than a terror act. The Goldenson Building houses neurobiology research and was structurally undamaged; no labs were affected.
Analysis

Key Findings

The timely warning was issued the same day as the 2:48 AM EDT explosion but distributed as a written HUPD bulletin rather than a MessageMe push — Harvard's standard pattern for contained incidents
The phrase 'observed two unidentified individuals fleeing the building' supplied the photographic-appeal hook that led to arrests within 72 hours
The Boston Fire Department Arson Unit's same-day 'appeared to be intentional' assessment escalated federal involvement immediately, mirroring post-2013-Marathon investigative posture
Both suspects later pleaded guilty to conspiracy to damage by fire or explosive a federally-funded building — the act was a commercial-grade firework detonated in a locker, not an ideological attack
No injuries occurred and no labs were damaged; the structural impact was limited to hallway wall damage on the fourth floor
The case is one of several 2024-2025 Harvard-affiliated arson/explosion incidents that the institution treated with formal Clery warnings rather than emergency notifications
Outcome
No injuries. Boston Police swept the building for additional devices; none were found. On November 4, 2025, Logan David Patterson, 18, of Bourne, MA, and Dominick Frank Cardoza, 20, of Plymouth, MA, were arrested by federal agents and charged with conspiracy to damage by fire or explosive a building receiving federal financial assistance. They pleaded guilty in April 2026, telling the court they had detonated a commercial-grade firework in a locker outside a lab; the blast damaged hallway walls but not the lab itself.
Provenance

Sources

  1. Official
  2. Student Paper
  3. Student Paper
  4. News
  5. News
  6. official press release
Tags
explosionarsontimely-warninggoldenson-buildinglongwood-campusharvard-medical-schoolharvardmassachusettsbostonprivate-r1fireworks-prankfederal-charges
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion