USA TODAY US Edition

Capitol Police nab armed man with fake pass

- Lindsay Schnell and Erin Mansfield

Police in Washington, D.C., arrested a Virginia man who allegedly tried to pass through a security checkpoint with an “unauthoriz­ed” inaugurati­on credential, unregister­ed handguns and more than 500 rounds of ammunition, according to officials.

Wesley Allen Beeler, 31, of Front Royal was arrested shortly after 6:30 p.m. Friday after police found two unregister­ed Glock 9mm handguns, 509 rounds of 9mm ammunition, 21 12-gauge shotgun shells and one 17-round Glock 17 magazine, all in his truck, according to a police report.

According to The Washington Post, Beeler was released on personal recognizan­ce after a hearing Saturday afternoon.

The Associated Press, citing a law enforcemen­t official who spoke on condition of anonymity, reported that Beeler had a valid credential for inaugural events, though it was not issued by the government and was not recognized by the officers.

Beeler told The Post in an interview that “it was an honest mistake” and that he had spent the past week working as hired security in downtown Washington ahead of the inaugurati­on. He said he forgot that his firearm was in his truck when he left his home in Virginia, where he said he has a license to carry.

“I pulled up to a checkpoint after getting lost in D.C. because I’m a country boy,” he said. “I showed them the inaugurati­on badge that was given to me.”

At the time of arrest northeast of the Capitol, Beeler was accused of illegally carrying a concealed weapon outside a home or business, possession of an unregister­ed firearm, possession of unregister­ed ammunition, unlawful possession of ammunition and possession of a large-capacity ammunition feeding device.

Beeler drove up to a security checkpoint and had window decals on his truck reading “Assault Life” and “If they come for your guns, give ’em your bullets first,” according to an affidavit filed in D.C. Superior Court. He handed officers an “unauthoriz­ed” inaugurati­on credential for the upcoming swearing-in of President-elect Joe Biden.

Officers asked if there was anything in the vehicle that would harm them, and Beeler said he had a handgun in the center console, the affidavit says. Officers removed him from the truck and saw the “butt end” of a gun in plain sight. Officers searched the truck and found the additional guns and ammunition.

The court documents mention only the gun Beeler said he had. The police report provided to USA TODAY lists two handguns as evidence.

The local Metropolit­an Police Department referred all inquiries on the matter to the U.S. Capitol Police.

In preparatio­n for Biden’s inaugurati­on on Wednesday, more than 20,000 National Guard troops are on the ground in the district, and much of the area has been fenced off.

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