Suspect ID’d in house explosion
Police: Man who fired shots at officers before a Virginia home exploded is believed to have died in the blast
ARLINGTON, Va. — The owner of a Virginia house that exploded as police tried to execute a search warrant is believed to have died in the blast, officials said Tuesday, as details emerged about numerous grievances he expressed against neighbors and others on social media and in lawsuits.
James Yoo, 56, was identified by Arlington County police Chief Andy Penn at a news conference as the person whose actions brought police to the Arlington home after he fired a “flare-type gun” from inside the house into the neighborhood more than 30 times.
Chief Penn said police responded to the house about 4:45 p.m. Monday after receiving reports of shots fired. When attempts to communicate with Yoo were largely unsuccessful, police obtained a search warrant.
As officers breached the door to enter the home, the suspect fired multiple gunshots from within the house, Chief Penn said. He said it wasn’t clear where in the house the shots were coming from or what the suspect was firing at.
Soon after that, just before 8:30 p.m., the house exploded, shooting flames and debris into the air in a blast that was felt for miles.
An investigation into the cause of the explosion is ongoing, fire officials said.
Assistant Fire Chief Jason Jenkins said authorities turned off gas service to the home and evacuated nearby residents — including people who lived in the other part of the duplex — about 90 minutes before the explosion.
“I’m not going to speculate on cause or origin,” he said of the blast.
“The fire department personnel absolutely saved lives” by evacuating residents of the neighborhood, Chief Jenkins said.
Investigators have not yet identified human remains found inside the home, but “all factors point to that it’s this individual (Yoo),” Chief Penn said.
Yoo publicly aired grievances against multiple people in his life. On LinkedIn, he recently posted paranoid rants about his neighbors and a former co-worker.
He also filed federal lawsuits that were dismissed as frivolous against his exwife, younger sister, a moving company and the New York Supreme Court.
Each of four lawsuits filed between 2018 and 2022 case were dismissed.
In 2018, Yoo filed a 163page federal lawsuit in New York against his then-wife, younger sister and a hospital after he said he was committed against his will. Yoo alleged conspiracy and deprivation of his rights, among other crimes.
The sprawling complaint included biographical details, such as who was at his wedding, and also wove in facts about who was president of the United States at the time.
Yoo described how his then-wife drove him to Rochester General Hospital in November 2015 “against his will.”
Yoo denied having any thoughts of suicide or prior depression. He cited hospital records that reference a suicide note that he left for his wife, which he said he never wrote.
Yoo also referenced many attempts to contact the FBI. He wrote that he believed that a New York Times reporter he saw on television was someone who had claimed to be an FBI agent and came to his house in 2017.
David Sundberg, assistant director of the FBI’s Washington field office, said Yoo had communicated with the FBI with phone calls, letters and online tips “over a number of years.”
“I would characterize these communications as primarily complaints about alleged frauds he believed were perpetrated against him,” Sundberg said. “The information contained therein and the nature of those communications did not lead to opening any FBI investigations.”