Student arrested after crawling through air duct to steal exam from professor's office

A student broke into his professor's office at the University of Kentucky trying steal a copy of an upcoming exam

Auniversity student crawled through the air duct of a building in the middle of the night to break into his lecturer's office and steal a copy of an upcoming exam in a statistics class.
Unfortunately for Harry Lynch II, the 21-year-old biosystems engineering student at the University of Kentucky, his professor, John Cain, had chosen to stay and work very late. 
Reaching the third floor office Mr Lynch eased himself down from the ceiling - a drop of some eight feet - and then opened the office door from the inside for Troy Kiphuth, a 21-year-old studying agricultural economics, Jay Blanton, university spokesman said
Mr Cain, the professor, had stepped out for a late night meal. Upon his return at around 1.30am on Wednesday, he found that something was blocking the door from the inside.
“He yelled out that he was calling the police and then the door swung open and two young men ran down the hallway,”  Mr Blanton told the Lexington-Herald Leader.
After his initial escape, Mr Lynch realised that the game was up. Concerned that Mr Cain had already been able to identify him as a student of his class, Mr Lynch returned to the  Multidisciplinary Science Building and confessed.
y this point the police had arrived, and both he and Mr Kiphuth, who was not in Mr Cain's class, were charged with third degree burglary, the spokesman said.
This was not the first time that Mr Lynch had used the building's air channels to sneak into offices. He told police that he had used the same tactic to enter Mr Cain's office the previous day but that he had not been able to find the exam paper.

He also confessed to successful stealing a copy of a previous exam, but said he did not share any of the answers with his class mates.
Both Mr Lynch and his friend are being investigated by the University’s Office of Student Conduct. Mr. Blanton would not discuss potential consequences.
“It’s an unusual set of circumstances,” he said. “It also underscores how late our faculty work.”

. . . Courtesy ::: telegraph
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