Nicholas Donnarumma, who isn't a student at BCC but apparently knows some, admitted making the calls when confronted by authorities, a law enforcement source told Daily Voice.
Donnarumma was arrested Wednesday, processed at the Bergen County Jail on two counts each of making terroristic threats and causing a false public alarm and released pending a Dec. 4 hearing in Central Judicial Processing Court in Hackensack.
Donnarumma "used technology to anonymize his calling line identity," Bergen County Prosecutor Mark Musella said.
Two Monday calls that came in to Paramus police around 1 p.m. didn't specify a campus but simply claimed that there was a bomb at BCC. So all three campus -- Paramus, Hackensack and Lyndhurst -- were cleared as a precaution.
Searches with bomb-sniffing Bergen County sheriff's K-9s were conducted. Some streets were temporarily closed. Local police, firefighters and emergency services units responded, as well.
The "all clear" was given roughly two hours later.
After determining the calls weren't a genuine threat, Musella's Cyber Crimes Unit, working with the county sheriff's office and Paramus police, pegged Donnarumma, the prosecutor said.
Before long, he was also charged with an Oct. 27 call to Saddle Brook police "claiming a bomb had been planted at a local business," Musella said.
SEE: Bomb Threat Clears All Three BCC Campuses
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WATCH THIS: A Saddle Brook woman whose apparently disabled car was captured on police dashcam video being smashed by an Amtrak train had been drinking and driving, police said.
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