Arizona man arrested after several threats made in Nebraska

 

An Arizona man was charged Thursday in connection with a series of threats made to schools and other institutions in the Omaha area last month.

Andrew Isaac Abrams, of Tucson, Arizona, was charged with transmitting a series of threats in interstate commerce on April 23, Acting U.S. Attorney Jan Sharp said in a statement.

The threats were received at schools in the Millard, Omaha, Elkhorn and Westside school districts. Other threats were received at the Union Pacific Railroad headquarters and the Douglas County Courthouse. Union Pacific evacuated its headquarters.

Law enforcement officials determined quickly that the calls were a hoax and were coming from outside of Nebraska.

Abrams faces up to five years in prison, a $250,000 fine, and up to three years of supervised release for each count of conviction.

Abrams was a former doctor in Arizona who had a history of mental illness and making threats, according to documents relating to the surrender of his medical license, The Omaha World-Herald reported. It was unclear if he had any connection to Omaha.

Arizona Headlines

Featured

Featured

Family wants justice as Mesa Police search for suspects in killing of teenage boy

Joe Siebold died in the hospital in February, a day after some teens came up to his car and shot him. On May 13, Mesa Police officials released new information surrounding the case.

Featured

Ahwatukee teacher arrested for grooming, having sex multiple times with underage student

U.S. Marshals say Justin Walters was arrested on May 12 and faces 10 counts of sexual contact with a minor.

Tune in to FOX 10 Phoenix for the latest news:

Get breaking news alerts in the FREE FOX 10 News app. Download for Apple iOS or Android.
 

Crime and Public SafetyTucsonNebraskaNews