The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Veteran sets self afire to protest VA problems

58-year-old man suffers burns on 85 percent to 90 percent of his body.

- By Stephen Deere, Steve Burns and John Spink sdeere@ajc.com, steve.burns@ajc.com, jspink@ajc.com

An Air Force veteran set himself on fire outside the state Capitol in downtown Atlanta on Tuesday to call attention to problems with the Department of Veterans Affairs, authoritie­s said.

A Capitol police officer extinguish­ed the flames, and the man was taken to Grady Memorial Hospital. He suffered burns over 85 percent to 90 percent of his body. Although his condition was unknown, Georgia State Patrol Capt. Mark Perry told The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on that the 58-year-old man was able to

talk with officers immediatel­y after the incident.

The GBI identified the man as John Michael Watts. He has no current address, the agency said.

Out of fear that the vehicle the man arrived in might contain explosive devices, authoritie­s closed several major streets around the Capitol and evacuated the building, along with the Judiciary, for most of the day. Workers moved children from a day care associated with Central Presbyteri­an Church to a neighborin­g Catholic church as a precaution.

Georgia Bureau of Investigat­ion agents used a robot to remove items from the man’s Nissan Sentra.

Watts had scrawled a message on piece of cardboard with a phone number that he asked people to call. Perry requested that no one call the number, cautioning that it might set off an incendiary device.

In recent years, the Department of Veteran Affairs has become one of the most maligned federal agencies. The agency is charged with providing health care to veterans and their dependents, but multiple investigat­ions have uncovered long wait

times and substandar­d care.

Authoritie­s did not identify any specific problems the Air Force veteran was protesting at the agency.

About 10:45 a.m., Watts parked his Sentra on Washington Street, stepped out of the car and walked toward the Capitol.

“He was strapped with some homemade incendiary devices (and) firecracke­rs, and doused himself with some kind of flammable liquid” before lighting the fireworks, Perry said.

Two bursts of loud pops resembling gunfire can be heard on a video of an unrelated news conference in the area at the time. Several more bursts followed for about 30 seconds. Sirens blared.

State patrol officers ordered pedestrian­s away from the area as multiple agencies converged on the scene.

GBI agents spent at least four hours investigat­ing the car.

At 3:15 p.m., Chris Riley, chief of staff for Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal, escorted Capitol staff back into the building to retrieve their belongings before leaving for the day.

As rush hour approached, the streets remained locked down. All four doors of the Sentra were open, and the hood had been popped open.

 ?? JOHN SPINK / JSPINK@AJC.COM ?? The Atlanta police bomb squad removes items in veteran John Michael Watts’ car Tuesday at the state Capitol.
JOHN SPINK / JSPINK@AJC.COM The Atlanta police bomb squad removes items in veteran John Michael Watts’ car Tuesday at the state Capitol.
 ?? JOHN SPINK / JSPINK@AJC.COM ?? Authoritie­s with a bomb squad robot gather at the scene of Tuesday’s self-immolation by a man identified as Air Force veteran John Michael Watts outside the state Capitol in downtown Atlanta.
JOHN SPINK / JSPINK@AJC.COM Authoritie­s with a bomb squad robot gather at the scene of Tuesday’s self-immolation by a man identified as Air Force veteran John Michael Watts outside the state Capitol in downtown Atlanta.

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