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Two people injured in shooting at entrance to NSA headquarters One person reportedly dead in shooting at NSA headquarters in Maryland
(about 1 hour later)
Two people have been injured near a gate to the National Security Agency headquarters in Fort Meade, Maryland, a spokeswoman for the army installation said on Monday. Law enforcement officials were scrambling on Monday to establish the basic facts of a violent incident near the gates of the National Security Agency at Fort Meade near Baltimore.
CNN and the Associated Press claimed one person had been killed, the latter saying two “senior US officials” cited preliminary reports which said a firefight ensued after a car tried to crash the gate. Early on Monday morning, an SUV that was said to contain two men dressed as women attempted to force entry through the gate, leading to a shooting incident. Representatives of the NSA did not immediately return repeated inquiries from the Guardian.
An FBI spokeswoman, Amy Thoreson, said the shooting scene was contained and the incident was not believed to be related to terrorism. Mary Doyle, a spokeswoman for Fort Meade, said the identities and even genders of the people in the SUV were unclear. But one was shot dead and the other badly injured and taken to the hospital.
Federal law enforcement officials told Reuters two people in a car tried to ram the spy agency’s gate and initial indications were that at least one was seriously injured. The motive was unknown but the incident was not related to terrorism, the officials said. Hulks of battered trucks were visible in photography taken near an access point to Fort Meade, a large army base that among other institutions hosts the headquarters of the US surveillance giant.
One federal law enforcement official told Reuters the incident appeared to be a local criminal matter. Doyle said it was unclear if the NSA was the target of the morning incursion attempt, which was said to have taken place around 9am, but the security gate in question led to the NSA’s campus, which is hived off from the rest of the sprawling army base.
White House principal deputy press secretary Eric Schultz said: “The president has been briefed on this morning’s incident at the National Security Agency and will be updated as appropriate.” “The assumption being, if you drive through one of those gates, that’s where you’re going,” Doyle told the Guardian.
Emergency responders were on the scene of the incident at the intelligence agency, Fort Meade spokeswoman Mary Doyle said. A different law enforcement source, who requested anonymity to discuss an ongoing investigation, said little had yet been confirmed about the latest apparent violence at Fort Meade, including the target of the attack.
The NSA headquarters are on the sprawling army installation near Baltimore. An NSA spokesperson declined to comment. “It’s too early to say,” the law enforcement source said.
Local television showed two damaged vehicles near a gate and emergency workers loading an injured uniformed man into an ambulance. No motive had yet been established, but both sources said there was no reason to believe that the incident had any ties to terrorism.
It was unclear if the two people in the SUV opened fire on officers, something the law enforcement source said could have happened but could also be attributed to the confusion and inaccuracy of early reports. A local Washington DC TV station showed a uniformed officer, apparently conscious, being carried on a stretcher into an ambulance. But a Fort Meade statement on the incident made no mention of an injured officer.
A local CBS news account from the scene, which is located between Baltimore and Washington DC, claimed that cocaine and an unidentified weapon were found in the suspect SUV.
Earlier in March, a former Maryland corrections officer, Hong Yong, was arrested on suspicions of carrying out multiple shootings in the area, including a 3 March shooting at an NSA building.
In its first statement on the incident, Fort Meade’s garrison commander, Colonel Brian Foley, indicated that authorities believed the danger had passed.
“The incident has been contained and is under investigation. The residents, service members and civilian employees on the installation are safe. We continue to remain vigilant at all of our access control points,” Foley said in the statement.
The FBI’s Baltimore field office said it was collaborating with NSA police and other law enforcement agencies to investigate the scene. A statement it released said the agents did not consider the incident to be terrorism.
“Our evidence response team is processing the crime scene, and FBI agents are doing joint interviews with witnesses. We are working with the US attorney’s office in Maryland to determine if federal charges are warranted,” the FBI statement said.