San Antonio Express-News

EX-S.A. man ‘looking for help’ before arrest in D.C.

- By Peter Hermann and Paul Duggan

WASHINGTON — A former San Antonio resident arrested outside the vice president’s residence Wednesday told an officer “he was looking for help” and “wanted to talk to the president” before leading police to his vehicle, which contained a rifle, 113 rounds of ammunition and a sword, according to court documents.

Police had been searching for 31-year-old Paul Murray since Tuesday, when authoritie­s in College Station distribute­d an intelligen­ce bulletin warning that he thought he was being targeted by the government and had texted his mother that he was in the District of Columbia “to take care of his problem.”

District Superior Court Magistrate Judge Heide Herrmann has ordered Murray detained until his next court appearance April 17, agreeing with prosecutor­s that Murray is dangerous. She ordered him to undergo a mental competency evaluation.

Murray was charged with illegal possession of a firearm and possession of a large-capacity ammunition magazine. Police said they found five magazines that could each hold 30 rounds.

There is no indication Murray, who moved from San Antonio to Bryan, made direct threats, but his arrest came amid heightened security alerts after the Jan. 6 riot at the Capitol and recent attacks targeting Asian Americans. Vice President Kamala Harris is Black and Asian.

Murray’s defense attorney, Cheline Schroeder, said during Thursday’s hearing that there is no strong evidence Murray is dangerous, and she called for the charges to be dropped, saying that, if anything, possession of the firearm is a statutory violation, not a felony charge.

Schroeder noted that Murray’s vehicle and firearm were found in a garage in downtown Washington, 3 miles from where her client was arrested. She said he had no intent to use the weapon.

But Assistant U.S. Attorney Cameron Tepfer told the court Murray is “reportedly schizophre­nic” and has been off his medication “for a period of years.”

Court documents say that on March 12, authoritie­s in Brazos County obtained a “mental health warrant” allowing for Murray’s “emergency detention.” The warrant states, according to the court documents, that Murray “thinks he is going to be murdered” by someone in the government.

The bulletin distribute­d by College Station police four days later says he told officers he had been attacked by a group called “3 Stones” while he was in the military overseas and that “he would hurt someone ‘if it was justified.’” It says Murray complained to police in Texas that he was not getting enough support, had stopped taking his medication and had been drugged or poisoned on a recent trip to Japan.

Efforts to reach Murray’s family were not successful.

A uniformed Secret Service agent first encountere­d Murray shortly after noon Wednesday at Massachuse­tts Avenue and Observator­y Circle in Washington and took him into custody.

The vice president traditiona­lly lives on the grounds of the Naval Observator­y, though it could not be determined whether Harris’ family was there Wednesday. After the inaugurati­on, they had been staying at the Blair House, near the White House, while the permanent residence underwent renovation­s.

The police bulletin also advised that Murray told police he had been medically discharged from the Army, where he had worked as a remote drone operator at a base within the U.S.

An Army spokesman said Murray held the rank of specialist and had been assigned as an unmanned aerial vehicle operator from March 2010 through April 2014. He had no deployment­s.

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