Manhunt prompts evacuation of Arizona
wildlife park
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[March 28, 2017]
By David Schwartz
PHOENIX (Reuters) - A manhunt for an armed
fugitive that triggered the evacuation of a popular wildlife park south
of the Grand Canyon ended peacefully on Monday with the arrest of the
suspect, police in Arizona said.
The accused gunman was believed to have possibly fled into the Bearizona
Wildlife Park after a confrontation with police that began as a traffic
stop and turned into a high-speed chase, a spokesman for the Yavapai
County Sheriff's Office said.
One passenger was thrown from the car during a getaway attempt, a second
man was taken into custody when the car crashed, but a third fled on
foot, firing at least one shot toward deputies from a handgun, according
to the spokesman, Dwight D'Evelyn.
The suspect disappeared near the Bearizona park, a 168-acre private
attraction nestled within the Kaibab National Forest at the edge of
Williams, a gateway town to Grand Canyon National Park about 60 miles
away.
As a precaution, Bearizona was closed and evacuated, with police
escorting all 200 visitors and about 20 staff safely from the facility,
spokeswoman Jocelyn Monteverde said. Public schools in Williams were
also placed on lockdown during the manhunt, police said.
At about 6 p.m. local time, nearly six hours after the search began,
police located the suspect, identified as John Freeman, in a highway
culvert near Bearizona, and he was arrested without incident, D'Evelyn
said.
Police said Freeman was wanted on a warrant from nearby Kingman,
Arizona, but no further information about him was immediately released.
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Suspect John Freeman is shown in this handphoto provided March 27,
2017. Police are searching for the suspect, armed and dangerous,
near Bearizona Wildlife Park in Williams, Arizona, U.S. Courtesy of
Yavapai Sheriff's Office/Handout via REUTERS
Bearizona is visited by some 300,000 tourists a year, many on their
way to or from the Grand Canyon, located about an hour's drive to
the north, Monteverde said. It features a collection of bears,
wolves, bison and other wildlife, some roaming a drive-through
exhibit and others displayed in smaller zoo-like enclosures.
(Reporting by David Schwartz in Phoenix; Additional reporting and
writing by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by Simon
Cameron-Moore)
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