One
dead, two hurt as vehicle tries to ram U.S. spy agency gates
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[March 31, 2015]
By Mark Hosenball
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Two people tried to
run their vehicle through the National Security Agency's gates near
Washington on Monday before guards at the spy agency fatally shot one of
them, said officials, who added there was no evidence of a link to
terrorism.
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The second occupant of the vehicle was also shot, according to one
official, and a police officer was injured.
Both suspects, who were dressed in women's clothes and may be
transgender, tried to drive their sport utility vehicle through an
entrance at the agency's Fort Meade, Maryland, headquarters, U.S.
law enforcement and security officials said.
The motive was not immediately known, but one official said drugs
may have been involved in the incident that occurred about 20 miles
(32 km) northeast of Washington.
Officials told Reuters they could not confirm media reports that
weapons and drugs were found in the SUV.
The surviving suspect was a resident of Baltimore, a federal law
enforcement official said. Local news media said the person was in
intensive care.
A law enforcement official said investigators were trying to
determine the identity of the person who died.
A Howard County police spokeswoman said the SUV was stolen in the
morning from outside a hotel in nearby Jessup, Maryland.
The NSA said in a statement that the two people in the vehicle
"attempted an unauthorized entry" and failed to follow directions to
leave the gate area.
The vehicle accelerated toward an NSA police car blocking the road
at the base gate. Officers fired when the driver refused to stop.
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The vehicle crashed into the police car. One of the vehicle's
occupants died at the scene of an undetermined cause, the NSA
statement said. A federal official said both occupants had been shot
by NSA police.
Television helicopter footage showed two damaged vehicles outside
the gates to NSA headquarters, just off a major highway linking
Baltimore and Washington. Video showed at least one person in
uniform being wheeled to an ambulance.
One of the vehicles shown was marked "Police" and had its hood up.
The other, a dark vehicle, had front-end damage.
The FBI said it was working with the U.S. Attorney's Office in
Maryland to determine whether federal charges were warranted.
(Reporting by Susan Heavey, Lisa Lambert, Mark Hosenball and Ian
Simpson; Additional reporting by Jeff Mason and John Clarke; Editing
by Jeffrey Benkoe, James Dalgleish, Tim Ahmann, Eric Beech and Peter
Cooney)
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