Orlando, Florida (CNN) -- A former University of
Central Florida student found dead in his dorm room of an apparent
suicide, alongside weapons and a backpack of bombs, planned a larger
attack, officials said Monday.
School spokesman Grant Heston identified the student as 30-year-old James Oliver Seevakumaran.
He was at the university
from fall 2010 through fall 2012 but was not enrolled for the spring
semester and was in the process of being removed from the dorm room
where he lived.
"While the crime scene
processing was under way in that room, we found some notes and some
writings that indicated that this was a planned attack," UCF Police
Chief Richard Beary told reporters.
He said Seevakumaran's
plan appeared to be set in motion as early as February, when weapons and
ammunition purchases were made. Seevakumaran developed a time line,
detailing where he planned to be and what he hoped to do. That plan
never came to fruition, however, thanks in part to the rapid response of
law enforcement, Beary said.
"It could have been a
very bad day for everybody here. All things considered, I think that we
were very blessed here at the University of Central Florida," he told
reporters.
When police entered the dorm room, they found Seevakumaran, dead
from an apparent self-inflicted single gunshot wound to the head, a
handgun, an assault weapon, a couple hundred rounds of ammunition, and four improvised explosive devices in a backpack.
An Orange County
Sheriff's bomb squad team examined the explosives and rendered them
harmless. Federal agents have joined the investigation.
It all started around
12:20 a.m., when a fire alarm went off at the Tower 1 dormitory. Police
believe that Seevakumaran pulled the alarm, then went to his room to
pick up the weapons.
There, he encountered
one of his roommates, who told police that Seevakumaran pointed a weapon
at him. The roommate ran into a bathroom and called 911.
Officers arrived within minutes to rescue the roommate. They found Seevakumaran's body in his bedroom.
The dorm, home to about 500 students, was evacuated.
"The way they handled it
was disappointing because it started as a fire alarm," said dorm
resident Antionette Thompson. "Nobody said what was going on with a bomb
and the shooting. So we were left in the dark."
Thompson was among five
dorm evacuees sitting together on a campus bench, some of them bundled
up in a blanket, others still dressed in their pajamas.
Another student dorm
resident, Ashley Graham, said they received a text from authorities
warning about a "suspicious death in Tower 1."
"It's really horrible that someone had to die," said Nathalie Sils-Aine. "It just makes me feel more unsafe."
According to Heston, the
school spokesman, Seevakumaran had never been seen by UCF counselors
and had not had any student conduct issues. He had one prior contact
with law enforcement -- a traffic arrest in 2006 -- the police chief
said.
The university said it
was providing food and counseling for the evacuated students at its
Veterans Academic Resource Center. Tower 1 reopened later Monday.
Firearms are prohibited at UCF, which is home to about 59,000 students at its main Orlando campus and 10 regional facilities.
As the evacuated students waited for hours to return to their building, worst-case scenarios raced through their heads.
"He was just above us,"
Graham said. "What if the roof caved in because a bomb went off and
everyone in the building got hurt? That's just the crazy part."
By: John Couwels, CNN