Tag Archives: Intruder

Video of Paul Pelosi Attack Shows Intruder Striking Former House Speaker’s Husband With a Hammer

Video and audio evidence from the attack on Nancy Pelosi’s husband was released Friday, showing for the first time the sequence of events that ended with 82 year-old

Paul Pelosi

being knocked unconscious with a hammer as police officers tackled his assailant.

Some of the evidence was previously shown in court proceedings in the case against David DePape, who is being held without bond on charges of attempted murder, assault with a deadly weapon and elder abuse in the Oct. 28 attack on Mr. Pelosi. Mr. DePape has pleaded not guilty.

The evidence released Friday, which includes police body-camera footage, is the first opportunity for the public to see and hear in detail the events leading up to and including a predawn assault, which focused attention on violence aimed at politicians in the U.S.

Its release came after a coalition of news organizations filed a motion earlier this month requesting to see the evidence, which prosecutors had previously withheld. Judge Stephen Murphy of San Francisco Superior Court granted the motion Wednesday.

Adam Lipson, a San Francisco deputy public defender representing Mr. DePape, said it was, “a terrible mistake to release this evidence, and in particular the video. Releasing this footage is disrespectful to Mr. Pelosi, and serves no purpose except to feed the public desire for spectacle and violence.” 

He also said the release would make it hard for his client to get a fair trial.

Mrs. Pelosi, who was speaker of the House of Representatives until earlier this month, said Friday that she had no intention of watching the newly released evidence and thanked people for their prayers.

The video begins with footage from a Capitol Police camera trained on the Pelosi home in San Francisco’s Pacific Heights neighborhood; it shows Mr. DePape—wearing shorts and a jacket—walking up to a rear entrance at 3:04 a.m., taking out a claw hammer from a bag and putting on gloves.

After looking around several times, he initially pushed the head of the hammer against the glass in a set of french doors. When it wouldn’t open, he swung with full force 16 times until the glass shattered and then pushed his way through, shoulder first.

The next evidence released is audio of Mr. Pelosi’s call to 911 a few minutes later, in which he tried to convey to a dispatcher that he needed help. 

Mr. Pelosi told Mr. DePape he had to use the bathroom and called 911 from a phone charging there, a person with knowledge of the incident previously said.

“I guess I called by mistake,” Mr. Pelosi said at first to the operator. After she asked if he needed help, he told her, “There’s a gentleman here just waiting for my wife to come back,

Nancy Pelosi.

She’s not going to be here for days, so I guess we’ll have to wait.”

When asked by the 911 operator if he knew the man, Mr. Pelosi said he didn’t. Mr. DePape can then be heard saying, “My name is David. I’m a friend of theirs.” 

Mr. Pelosi then hung up after saying, “He wants me to get the hell off the phone.”

Body camera footage of two San Francisco police officers dispatched to the home subsequently show them knocking on the front door. Mr. Pelosi opened the door, looking disheveled and not wearing pants, with his hand on a hammer that Mr. DePape is holding. After an officer asks, “What’s going on, man?”, Mr. DePape answered “Everything’s good.” 

An officer then ordered him to “drop the hammer,” after which the suspect answered “Um, nope” and began struggling with the smaller Mr. Pelosi for control. He quickly pinned the older man’s right arm to free the hammer and then raised it over his head to strike Mr. Pelosi. 

A door obscures Mr. Pelosi at this point, but the footage then shows the officers tackling Mr. DePape and handcuffing him as he lies on the floor, partially atop Mr. Pelosi, who appears to be unconscious.

Mr. Pelosi was treated at a local trauma center and later released home, where his wife said he faced a long recovery. Mrs. Pelosi said Friday that her husband is making progress on his recovery, but it will take more time.

Write to Jim Carlton at Jim.Carlton@wsj.com

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Intruder Is Killed at Peruvian Ambassador’s Washington Home

Secret Service officers fatally shot an intruder on Wednesday morning at a mansion in Northwest Washington that has long served as the Peruvian ambassador’s residence, officials said.

Robert J. Contee III, the chief of the Metropolitan Police Department, said a man in his 20s or 30s smashed several windows in the back of the residence, in the 3000 block of Garrison Street Northwest, adding that it was unclear if he had entered the home. After officers were called to the residence shortly before 8 a.m., they unsuccessfully fired their stun guns at the man, who was holding a metal stake in the backyard, Chief Contee said.

Two officers then fired their guns, Chief Contee said. The man was pronounced dead at the scene.

“We don’t know why this person smashed out several windows, we don’t know why this person had a metal stake, we don’t know why this person approached the officers with this metal stake, but we’re investigating this now,” he told reporters.

The two officers were taken to a hospital for evaluation, Chief Contee said. He did not know the extent of their injuries but said they were not life-threatening.

The Peruvian ambassador and his wife were home at the time and were not injured, Chief Contee said. Peru’s ambassador to the United States is Oswaldo de Rivero, according to the embassy’s website.

Peru has been roiled in recent weeks by violent protests over rising fuel, fertilizer and food prices, but it was unclear if there was any connection to Wednesday’s intrusion.

Peru purchased the home as the embassy’s residence in 1944, according to Diplomatic Connections. In 2019, WTTG-TV described the residence, which was built in 1928, as “a massive home that sits on D.C.’s largest private property,” totaling 25 acres. It contained “room after room of Peruvian treasures,” with ancient art and sculptures dating back 1,500 years, the Fox affiliate reported.

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Intruder shot at NC rapper DaBaby’s home after trespassing, 911 calls say :: WRAL.com

— 911 calls released in a shooting that happened at North Carolina rapper DaBaby’s home near Charlotte Wednesday night show that a person was shot for trespassing.

Police have not accused DaBaby, whose real name is Jonathan Kirk, of the shooting. Authorities did confirm that Kirk was home at the time of the shooting.

The gunman called 911 to say that he shot an intruder on Wednesday night.

“I shot him in his leg,” the 911 caller said. “He was trespassing on my property.”

Officers found the victim at Kirk’s home and he was taken to a local hospital for treatment.

Police said the person who was shot is not from the area and was not a guest at the property.

“Just like any other property owner, they’re entitled to their right to secure their property and make sure nobody comes in,” according to Troutman Police Chief Josh Watson.

911 calls released to WCNC were redacted and the voice of the caller was altered.

The home, which is in the small town of Troutman just north of Charlotte, is surrounded by a tall concrete wall and security gate. Signs displaying “No Trespassing” and “We have guns and shovels” are posted around the property.

DaBaby recently made headlines after making disparaging comments about gay men and HIV during a performance at a Miami music festival. He is also known for beefing with the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department in 2019 after being detained on minor drug charges.

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Armed Intruder Prompts Lockdown at Joint Base Andrews as Vice President Lands

The military base in Maryland that the president and the vice president use to travel to and from Washington was put on lockdown on Sunday night when two people, at least one of whom was armed, bypassed a security checkpoint at about the time that Vice President Kamala Harris and four Cabinet members landed there, military officials said.

The two people drove through the checkpoint at the main gate and “failed to adhere to commands of security personnel,” Joint Base Andrews in Prince George’s County, Md., said in a statement on Sunday night.

The authorities at the base, in the Maryland suburbs of Washington, stopped the intruders’ vehicle with “barriers,” but they fled, the statement said. One of them was apprehended, and hours later, after a full sweep of the base, officials said they had found evidence the second intruder had “departed the installation.”

“We can confirm that the individual who was apprehended had a weapon, but no shots have been fired,” the base said in a statement. The authorities did not identify the person who was apprehended.

Ms. Harris and her husband, Doug Emhoff, were safely flown off the base on Marine Two, the vice-presidential helicopter, although it was unclear if they left before or after they heard about the lockdown, according to reporters who had just traveled to Selma, Ala., with Ms. Harris.

Police officers searched the grounds and the vehicles at the scene, including a shuttle containing the reporters.

Traffic leaving the base was halted while police enforced the lockdown, creating a long line stretching back from a main gate. Police vehicles and helicopters circled the base.

Ms. Harris, Mr. Emhoff and the four Cabinet members — Education Secretary Miguel Cardona; Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg; Housing Secretary Marcia Fudge; and Michael S. Regan, the administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency — had just flown into the base on Air Force Two, according to the reporters who had traveled with them.

The vice president had traveled in the morning to commemorate the 57th anniversary of the civil rights march on the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma.

In February 2021, an intruder at the base boarded a plane typically used by senior government officials and military leaders. The breach prompted the authorities to order a review of security at Air Force bases worldwide.

A similar lockdown at the base happened in 2016 after there were reports of an active gunman, grounding then-Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s flight to Ohio. It came the same day the base had planned to hold an active shooter response drill. The reports of a gunman turned out to be false.

Derrick Bryson Taylor contributed reporting.



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Armed intruder at Joint Base Andrews

The intruders drove through a security checkpoint at the main gate about 9 p.m., and failed to heed guards’ orders, base officials said late Sunday in a statement.

Barriers were deployed, according to the statement. The vehicle was stopped, but two people fled, the base said.

As of 11 p.m. Sunday, the whereabouts of the second intruder remained unknown, according to the statement, and the main gate to the base remained closed.

The incident appeared to be one of the most serious breaches of security in memory at Andrews, which is a few miles outside Washington, in the Suitland area of suburban Prince George’s County, Md.

It was unclear late Sunday what motivated the incident, and why the intruders entered the base.

Harris and several Cabinet members had traveled to Selma, Ala., to commemorate the anniversary of Bloody Sunday, in which police attacked peaceful protesters in 1965. They left Alabama on Air Force Two about 6:45 p.m. Sunday and landed in Maryland about 9 p.m.

A White House official confirmed by about 9:40 p.m. that all four Cabinet secretaries — Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg, Housing Secretary Marcia L. Fudge, Education Secretary Miguel Cardona and Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Michael Regan — left the base safely.

A report of the “armed individual on base” was sent at 9:06 p.m. via NPR’s Scott Detrow, who was traveling with the group. The president was not at Joint Base Andrews on Sunday because he traveled directly from Delaware to the White House via a helicopter.

Harris departed via Marine Two before the report was made public, according to reports from journalists traveling with Harris that were confirmed by the vice president’s office.

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Police in Durham, England, help stop intruder in Durham, Canada

Instead, she had connected with the Durham Constabulary, more than 3,000 miles away in the northeast of England.

Durham Constabulary said in a statement that it was contacted on Wednesday afternoon using an online live chat facility “by a distressed woman” who reported an intruder trying to get into her home in Durham, Canada.

The individual, who the constables described as being “distraught,” was able to convey that she needed urgent help but then her communication abruptly stopped.

A quick-thinking control room worker in the United Kingdom helped save her from immediate danger. Realizing she meant to contact a different Durham police force, the worker kept the live chat open, while his control room colleagues made contact with officers at Durham Regional Police Service in Ontario.

Durham police confirmed in a statement that their officers were contacted by the British constables on Wednesday and were immediately dispatched to a residence in the area of Audley Road and Taunton Road East, in the Canadian town of Ajax, where they found a 35-year-old man inside the woman’s house.

When the police arrived, the male suspect fled but was eventually located in a residential yard, Canadian police said, where after an altercation he was arrested. The unnamed suspect, who police said was from Clarington, a nearby area, has been charged with several offenses, including breaking and entering a dwelling and assault.

The victim received medical attention for her injuries, Canadian police said.

Inspector Andrea Arthur, head of the force control room in Durham, England, — a popular college city that is home to about 48,000 people — called it an “an unusual incident.” She praised her team for remaining calm and helping “Canadian colleagues” to resolve the situation quickly.

“If we can assist in rescuing a vulnerable victim in immediate danger, regardless of where they live, we will do all we can to help,” Arthur said.

Inspector Paul Hallett of the Durham Regional Police went further, calling the event “a success story of international cooperation between two police communication centers separated by tremendous distance.”

Canadian police are urging anyone with information about the crime to come forward.



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Kat Von D’s Los Angeles Mansion Broken Into By Intruder While She Slept, Says TMZ Report

Makeup mogul Kat Von D noticed an unwelcome home visitor on Saturday night when she woke up to a beam of light moving around her house around 10:15 p.m, according to TMZ. The tattoo artist immediately grabbed her 3-year-old son, left the house, and called 911. According to the outlet, law enforcement sources say that police arrived and found a middle-aged man wandering around the gothic mansion, and arrested him for residential burglary. He allegedly told police that he was planning to buy the house—which recently went on the market for $15 million—and needed to use the bathroom. The gothic mansion, built in 1896 and restored to its original style by Kat Von D, features a blood-red swimming pool, hand-painted ceilings, and custom statues.

Read it at TMZ

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Fulton County Sheriff’s deputy shoots, kills alleged intruder at his SE Atlanta home – WSB-TV Channel 2

ATLANTA — The Georgia Bureau of Investigation said a man is dead after a Fulton County Sheriff’s Deputy caught him breaking into his home.

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The home sits near the intersection of Springside Drive and Macon Drive in SE Atlanta.

Investigators said the deputy was just returning home before midnight when he got a Ring notification that showed a man breaking into the home.

When the deputy got home, he found the man walking away from the property carrying tools and other items.

The deputy was driving his personal car but was still wearing his uniform and equipment.

The GBI said the deputy followed the man as he walked along a gravel road. When the man walked into some woods, the deputy confronted him.

While in the woods, the deputy and the suspect and the deputy shot the suspect.

Investigators said they found the deputy performing CPR on the man, who was taken to Grady Memorial Hospital where he later died.

The deputy suffered a minor ankle injury.

The backdoor of the deputy’s home had been kicked in and the items found in the woods had been taken from his home.

Investigators have not released the name of the suspect or the deputy.

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The scene stretched past several homes on Springside Drive. Channel 2′s Elizabeth Rawlins said that investigators spent several hours looking for evidence on and near a dark colored car that was left parked in the middle of the road with the driver’s door open.

Rawlins spoke several neighbors, including Marilyn Gaynor who lives on the second floor of a nearby building and woke up to see the long lines of investigators on her street

“This is what I see at 6 o’clock in the morning,” Gaynor said.

Antoinette Emerson also lives nearby. Hearing about what happened made her nervous.

“It’s crazy. You know, you have to wake up to stuff like this,” Emerson said. “You know you’ve got to feel comfortable being in your own home.”

“What was he thinking?” Gaynor said.

Emerson said she may need to do more to make sure her home is safe.

“It’s making me aware that I probably need to get alarms or cameras and stuff like that set up around my house,” said Emerson.

Rawlins asked Gaynor if anything like this has happened in her neighborhood before.

“Is this typical,” Rawlins asked. “No this is the first,” said Gaynor.

“What’s that mean for you and your family?” asked Rawlins. “It’s scary because I’m sleeping right here and my bedroom is right in front of there (gesturing towards house). It’s too close to home.

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Ohio dad fatally shoots daughter, 16; mistook her for intruder: police

An Ohio father mistook his 16-year-old daughter for an intruder early Wednesday and fatally shot her inside his Columbus home’s garage, police said.

The girl’s mother told dispatchers about the accident that occurred after the home’s security alarm went off, police said. 

NORTH CAROLINA GIRL, 3, DIES AFTER ACCIDENTALLY SHOOTING HERSELF ON CHRISTMAS

The Columbus Dispatch obtained the frantic, eight-minute-long 911 call. The paper reported that both parents could be heard urging the girl to wake up. The victim was identified as Janae Hairston, a junior at Canal Winchester High School.

FILE: Columbus Police responded to the shooting inside the home. (Photo by Stephen Zenner/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)
(Stephen Zenner/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)

She was rushed to a hospital where she was pronounced dead. The shooting remains under investigation and no charges have been filed. The school announced that resource officers have been made available to students. 

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“These kids have such a bright future in front of them,” Tim Becker, Columbus’ deputy police chief, said, according to ABC 6. “To have that prematurely taken away is extra tragic.”

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Armed intruder at Windsor Castle arrested as Queen Elizabeth, royal family celebrated Christmas

British authorities on Saturday said they arrested a man who brought a weapon onto the grounds of Windsor Castle as Queen Elizabeth and her family celebrated Christmas inside.

The 19 year-old alleged intruder is being held on charges that he breached or trespassed a protected site and was carrying an “offensive weapon,” according to local police.

“We can confirm security processes were triggered within moments of the man entering the grounds and he did not enter any buildings,” Rebecca Mears, Thames Valley Police superintendent, said. “Members of the Royal Family have been informed about the incident. We do not believe there is a wider danger to the public.”

Police said the breach occurred at 8:30 a.m. Christmas morning.

Queen Elizabeth II, 95, along with her son, Prince Charles, and other members of the royal family are spending the holiday at Windsor castle this year after Covid-19 disrupted plans to travel to Sandringham, the royal estate in eastern England where the family traditionally celebrates the holiday.

Members of the royal family were seen later in the morning arriving for a Christmas service in the St. George Chapel in the Windsor Castle complex.

The Queen released a pre-recorded Christmas message in which she paid tribute to her husband, Prince Philip, who died in April at age 99.

The traditional holiday message spoke to the difficulties facing many around the world who are marking the holiday without loved ones and facing ongoing dangers from a new Covid variant.

“Although it’s a time of great happiness and good cheer for many, Christmas can be hard for those who have lost loved ones,” she said in the televised speech beside a framed photo of herself with her husband. “This year, especially, I understand why.”

She noted that while the pandemic makes celebrations challenging this year, “we can still enjoy the many happy traditions.”

The Associated Press, Reuters and Chantal Da Silva contributed.

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