Drunken Employee Shoots Up A Server

Police in Salt Lake City say an employee of a mortgage company opened fire on a $100,000 server with a .45 caliber automatic, and then concocted a cover story that his gun had been stolen and used to shoot up the IT equipment.

Data Center Knowledge

August 26, 2010

1 Min Read
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Police in Salt Lake City say an employee of a mortgage company opened fire on a $100,000 server with a .45 caliber automatic, and then concocted a cover story that his gun had been stolen and used to shoot up the IT equipment.

Joshua Lee Campbell, 23, an employee of RANLife Home Loans, has been charged with felony criminal mischief, carrying a dangerous weapon while under the influence of alcohol, and giving false information to a law enforcement officer. 

Campbell told police he had been “mugged, assaulted with his own firearm and drugged” by a mystery assailant. Police say Campbell had been out drinking with a co-worker, and returned to the office and shot up the server. A co-worker told police she discovered Campbell passed out on the floor with his pistol next to him.  

Media reports in the Salt Lake Tribune and Deseret News clearly suggest Campbell was in a troubled state. But he's not the first person to contemplate aggression against a server, as demonstrated in The Gallery of Exploding Servers (not to mention Flying and Crashing Servers and SWAT Team 1, Servers 0). This story is also being discussed over at Slashdot.

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Data Center Knowledge

Data Center Knowledge, a sister site to ITPro Today, is a leading online source of daily news and analysis about the data center industry. Areas of coverage include power and cooling technology, processor and server architecture, networks, storage, the colocation industry, data center company stocks, cloud, the modern hyper-scale data center space, edge computing, infrastructure for machine learning, and virtual and augmented reality. Each month, hundreds of thousands of data center professionals (C-level, business, IT and facilities decision-makers) turn to DCK to help them develop data center strategies and/or design, build and manage world-class data centers. These buyers and decision-makers rely on DCK as a trusted source of breaking news and expertise on these specialized facilities.

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