The Columbus Dispatch

Suspect surrenders after DC standoff

Man claimed to have bomb near Capitol

- Eric Tucker, Colleen Long and Michael Balsamo

WASHINGTON – A man who claimed to have a bomb in a pickup truck near the Capitol surrendere­d to law enforcemen­t after an hourslong standoff Thursday that prompted a massive police response and the evacuation­s of government buildings and businesses in the area.

Police did not immediatel­y know whether there were explosives in the vehicle, but authoritie­s were searching the truck in an effort to understand what led the man, identified by law enforcemen­t officials as 49-year-old Floyd Ray Roseberry of North Carolina, to drive onto the sidewalk outside the Library of Congress and make bomb threats to officers.

The standoff was resolved peacefully after roughly five hours of negotiatio­ns, ending when Roseberry crawled out of the truck and was taken into law enforcemen­t custody. But the incident brought the area surroundin­g the Capitol to a virtual standstill as police emptied buildings and cordoned off streets as a precaution. Congress is in recess this week, but staffers were seen calmly walking out of the area at the direction of authoritie­s.

The episode unfolded during a tense period in Washington, coming eight months after the insurrecti­on at the U.S. Capitol.

The incident began about 9:15 a.m. when a truck drove up the sidewalk outside the library. The driver told the responding officer that he had a bomb, and was holding what the officer believed to be a detonator. The truck had no license plates.

Police negotiator­s spent hours communicat­ing with Roseberry as he wrote notes and showed them to authoritie­s from inside the truck, according to the two people and a third person also briefed on the matter, all of whom spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to publicly discuss the matter.

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