Lodi News-Sentinel

N.C. man surrenders after threat, standoff at Library of Congress

- Chris Cioffi

WASHINGTON — A man is in custody after surrenderi­ng to police, ending a tense five-hour standoff Thursday in front of the Library of Congress.

Floyd Roy Roseberry of Grover, North Carolina, was taken into police custody “without incident,” Capitol Police Chief J. Thomas Manger told reporters at a news conference. Manger said police are still searching Roseberry’s truck to see if he actually had explosives in the vehicle.

At an earlier news conference, Manger said a man drove a black truck drove onto a sidewalk in front of the Library of Congress and told an officer he had a bomb.

“The officer said [there] appeared to be a detonator in the man’s hand,” Manger told reporters shortly after noon. Officers were “in communicat­ion with the suspect” and working to “peacefully resolve” the situation, he said.

The threat sparked the evacuation of staffers across the Capitol complex and triggered reminders of the chaos of Jan. 6, leaving onlookers shaken. A video on Facebook appeared to show a man inside a truck streaming the standoff in real time and referencin­g “a revolution.” Manger did not confirm the authentici­ty of that footage, but said “some informatio­n has been livestream­ed.”

The situation began unfolding around 9:30 a.m., when Capitol Police announced officers were investigat­ing a suspicious vehicle near the library, located at the corner of First Street Southeast and Independen­ce Avenue. Law enforcemen­t alerted staff in the Library of Congress’ Madison and Jefferson buildings to evacuate, along with House staff in the Cannon House Office Building.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States