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Campus Alert Archive
Truman

A Training Click Sends 'Active Shooter Alert' to Every Desktop Computer at Truman State

MOthreat of violenceemergency notificationmedium confidence
UnfoundedNo evidence of an actual threat was found. The institutional response is documented because the alert communication is identical to what would occur during a real incident.

On Friday, August 9, 2024, Truman State University Department of Public Safety Chief Sara Seifert was running a desktop-alert training exercise with a new sergeant. She intended to send a test 'Active Shooter Alert' to only two recipients — herself and the trainee — to demonstrate the TruAlert system's desktop-popup channel. One setting was left enabled, and the test alert went to every desktop computer on Truman's Kirksville campus. Chief Seifert publicly took responsibility for the error.

Alerts
2
Response
Killed
0
Injured
0
Institution
Truman State University
Public Masters · MO
~3,700 studentsTruAlert
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

2 messages in sequence

Some alert texts below are approximate reconstructions from news coverage, not confirmed verbatim transcripts. Reconstructed texts are shown in italic with a dashed border. Verified verbatim texts have a solid border and are marked accordingly.

INITIAL ALERTDesktop
ACTIVE SHOOTER ALERT - RUN. HIDE. FIGHT.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

Reconstructed text reflecting Truman's documented 'Run. Hide. Fight.' active-shooter framing as taught in the university's Active Shooter / Hostile Intruder emergency procedures
Sent via the desktop-popup channel — not SMS — which is a less commonly studied alert vector but reaches every staff and lab computer simultaneously
The accidental message was the only one sent during the incident; no follow-up 'this was a test' alert appears to have been pushed via the same desktop channel, requiring word-of-mouth correction
CORRECTIONEmail
Approximate reconstruction216 chars
TruAlert: The Active Shooter Alert sent moments ago via desktop popup was a test issued in error during a training exercise. There is no threat to the Truman State University campus. We apologize for the alarm. - DPS

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

Reconstructed correction. Chief Seifert publicly told KTVO she was 'the one to blame' and explained the cause: a training-mode setting was left in 'send to all' rather than restricted to the two-person trainer/trainee pairing
The correction did not use the desktop-popup channel that pushed the original alert — it went via email, meaning some who saw the popup may not have immediately received the correction
The incident illustrates a specific class of alert-system failure: misconfiguration during a training session, which is qualitatively different from external malicious actors or stale building names
Context

Background

Truman State University is a public master's institution in Kirksville, Missouri, with about 3,700 students. On Friday, August 9, 2024 — two weeks before the fall semester — Department of Public Safety Chief Sara Seifert was conducting a training exercise with a new sergeant to demonstrate the TruAlert desktop-popup feature. She intended the test message to go only to two people — herself and the trainee — but a separate 'distribution' setting was left enabled. The result: an 'Active Shooter Alert' popped up on every Truman State desktop computer simultaneously, causing immediate panic among staff and faculty on campus. Chief Seifert publicly told KTVO that she 'is the one to blame for the incident.' The case is rare because it documents an internal misconfiguration cause for a false active-shooter alert — distinct from external swatting, stale geographic data, or third-party reporting errors that drive most documented false-alert incidents. Truman's Department of Public Safety reviewed its desktop-alert send protocols in the aftermath. The campus was on summer schedule with limited staff presence, which limited the radius of impact compared with what would have occurred during the academic year.
Analysis

Key Findings

An internal training misconfiguration sent an 'Active Shooter Alert' to every Truman State desktop computer — a class of false-alert cause (training-mode misconfiguration) that is rarely studied compared with swatting or stale geographic data
The DPS Chief publicly took responsibility, an accountability practice not always present in false-alert incidents
The desktop-popup channel was used as the false-alert vector — not the more commonly studied SMS channel — illustrating that the channel mix matters for both false alerts and corrections
The accidental alert occurred two weeks before fall semester, during a low-occupancy period; had the same misconfiguration occurred mid-semester, the impact would have been measurably larger
Truman trains 'Run. Hide. Fight.' as its active-shooter standard, mirroring the DHS active-shooter framework
Outcome
No actual threat. Chief Sara Seifert publicly took responsibility. Truman State Public Safety reviewed its desktop-alert send protocols. No injuries.
Provenance

Sources

  1. News
  2. Official
  3. Official
  4. Source
  5. Official
Tags
false-alerttraining-failuredesktop-popupmissouritruman-statepublic-mastersalert-system-misconfigurationdiversity-priorityplainsUnfounded
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion