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UTEP

A Single Hoax 911 Call Locked Down a Hispanic-Serving R1 and Two Border School Districts for Five Hours

TXswattingemergency notificationhigh confidence
Confirmed HoaxDetermined to be a hoax. The institutional response is documented because it reveals how the alert system performed under a perceived real threat.

On the morning of November 18, 2021, the University of Texas at El Paso went into a campus-wide shelter-in-place for nearly five hours after El Paso Police received a 911 call from a man claiming he was suicidal, on drugs, armed, and driving toward the campus. UTEP's Miner Alert text system reproduced EPPD's wording almost verbatim, declaring a 'Dangerous Situation.' Two surrounding school districts — El Paso ISD and Canutillo ISD — also went on lockdown. The all-clear came at 12:12 p.m. MST once police determined the 911 call had been a hoax.

Alerts
2
Response
45 min
Killed
0
Injured
0
Institution
The University of Texas at El Paso
Public R1 · TX
~24,000 studentsRaveMiner Alert
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

2 messages in sequence · 2 verified verbatim

INITIAL ALERTSMS
Verified verbatimKVIA — quoted Miner Alert text in full119 chars
Dangerous Situation -- EPPD advises that suicidal suspect on drugs with weapon is on his way to UTEP, shelter in place.
Sent at 7:08 a.m. MST, 45 minutes after EPPD received the 911 call at 6:23 a.m.
UTEP simply repeated EPPD's framing — 'suicidal suspect on drugs with weapon' — language unusual for a campus alert in being explicitly drug- and mental-health-coded
No specific building or location was given inside campus, only that the suspect was 'on his way' — a notable departure from the precise location norm of post-Virginia Tech alerts
ALL CLEARSMS+5h 4m
UTEP Alert: ALL CLEAR. Dangerous Situation is over. Please return to normal activities.
Sent at 12:12 p.m. MST — over five hours after the initial alert, an unusually long shelter-in-place for a hoax
The 'return to normal activities' phrasing did not explain that the original threat had been a fake 911 call — that disclosure came later from EPPD, not UTEP
Students later told The Prospector they felt the all-clear came with too little explanation of what had happened
Context

Background

The University of Texas at El Paso is a Hispanic-Serving Institution and Carnegie R1 research university with roughly 24,000 students, most of them Mexican-American or Mexican-national commuter students from the El Paso/Cd. Juarez border region. On the morning of November 18, 2021, El Paso Police received a 911 call at 6:23 a.m. MST from a man saying he was suicidal, on drugs, armed, and driving toward UTEP. EPPD relayed the threat to UTEP, and at 7:08 a.m. UTEP's Miner Alert system pushed an SMS warning of a 'Dangerous Situation' and instructed shelter-in-place. The lockdown also rippled into the surrounding El Paso ISD and Canutillo ISD — illustrating how a single fabricated 911 call in a dense border city can cascade across multiple education systems. UTEP lifted the shelter-in-place at 12:12 p.m., over five hours after the initial alert. EPPD subsequently determined the 911 call had been fabricated, but students raised concerns about the slow timeline and lack of detail in UTEP's communications. The case is one of the first documented 'driving-toward-campus' swatting variants — a hoax pattern that became more common in subsequent years.
Analysis

Key Findings

A single hoax 911 call placed UTEP and two surrounding K-12 districts on lockdown for nearly five hours
UTEP's initial alert reproduced EPPD's drug- and mental-health-coded framing verbatim — language unusual for campus alerts
The five-hour shelter-in-place was unusually long for an incident that turned out to be a hoax with no on-campus suspect ever located
Border-region campuses face a unique cascade risk where a single false call can shut down higher-ed and K-12 simultaneously
The all-clear text did not disclose that the original threat had been a fake 911 call, prompting student criticism of UTEP's transparency
Outcome
All-clear issued at 12:12 p.m. MST after El Paso Police determined the 911 call was fabricated. No suspect was ever located on campus. EPPD said making a false 911 call is a criminal offense, but no public arrest was announced.
Provenance

Sources

  1. Student Paper
  2. News
  3. News
  4. News
  5. News
  6. Official
  7. Official
Tags
swattinghsihispanic-servingborder-campustexasel-pasoshelter-in-placefalse-911miner-alertk12-cascadeHoax
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion