Five days after it was expected, Texas A&M University officials know the whereabouts of a package containing radioactive materials.
According to the university’s interim vice president for marketing and communications, Shane Hinckley, the package arrived as scheduled last Thursday.
But it was delivered to the wrong location.
Hinckley says the package wound up at one of A&M’s secure hazardous material storage facilities.
The package was found Tuesday in its original shipping condition…unopened and undamaged.
Hinckley says protocols were followed in moving the package from the wrong delivery location to storage.
And Hinckley says the professor who ordered the materials for research purposes also followed procedures by notifying officials when he did not receive the package as scheduled last Thursday.