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Former UCF student who killed himself had planned wider attack

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“It’s a tragedy, but it’s not an unspeakable tragedy,” said UCF President John Hitt at an afternoon news conference. “A life was lost, but it was the life of the perpetrator.”

Classes at the university — the second largest in the nation by enrollment — were canceled for the morning but resumed at noon. By afternoon, most of the sprawling campus was bustling as usual, though crime scene tape and police cars restricted access near Tower 1, a relatively new addition to the 50-year-old university.

Beary said both the guns found in Seevakumaran’s room were purchased from an Orlando gun shop, with a first purchase in February.

One was a High Point 45-caliber semi-automatic pistol and the other an American Tech 22-magnum tactical rifle. The rifle, Beary said, could easily have been hidden in a gym bag and brought undetected into the apartment building. Firearms are not allowed on campus.

Police also found a backpack containing four “improvised” explosives. Officials would not say what the explosives were made of, but they did say that the bombs “were not in final completed stages.” They also said the explosives, together, would not have had enough power to bring down the apartment building.

As they investigated the scene, officials uncovered notes from Seevakumaran indicating he had planned an attack in the building. He had laid out a time line but did not give a lot of specific details, Beary said, and did not mention any specific people he wanted to kill.

Seevakumaran was a business major who had been enrolled at UCF from fall 2010 to fall 2012. He had transferred to UCF from Seminole State College, officials said. He was a graduate of Seminole High in Sanford, Fla.

He had not had any UCF student conduct issues, nor had he ever been seen by the UCF counseling services department, they said.

UCF Police, the FBI and Orange County Sheriff’s Office bomb squad converged on the building to investigate and secure the weapons early Monday.

Hitt said that it appeared that police responded appropriately and the protocols that had been put in place had been followed. Still, Hitt said, the university will analyze events leading up to Seevakumaran’s death and actions taken afterward.

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