The Hawaii public employee who plunged the state into chaos by accidentally sending out an incoming -
missile emergency alert Saturday has been re-assigned.
The Hawaii public employee who plunged the state into chaos by accidentally sending out an incoming -
missile emergency alert Saturday has been reassigned, according to reports.
Not exact matches
Emergency authorities reversed the warning with a second mobile
alert sent 38 minutes later confirming «no
missile threat or danger» and «false alarm.»
An
emergency alert was sent to mobile phones and interrupted TV broadcasts warning people of an imminent
missile threat on Saturday morning.
The Hawaii
emergency management worker who sent a false
alert last month warning of an imminent
missile attack says he was convinced the threat was real and «100 percent sure» he was doing the right thing.
The
emergency alert about an incoming «ballistic
missile threat» that jolted Hawaiians awake Saturday morning was a false alarm caused by someone hitting the «wrong button,» Gov. David Ige said.