The United States Capitol Police (USCP) said an armed man who took a U.S. Capitol tour and visited the Library of Congress was arrested on Tuesday. USCP said it received information about a man in the area with mental health issues and suicidal thoughts who was allegedly armed.
A man was discovered to be carrying a gun after attending a tour of the U.S. Capitol and leaving the nearby Library of Congress.
General Discharge on MSN1d
US CAPITOL POLICE - WHAT DO THEY DO?
Want to know more about the United States Capitol Police? You’ve probably heard about them a lot on the news lately. The United States Capitol police is charged with protecting members of congress within the capitol region,
A Massachusetts man who went on a tour inside the U.S. Capitol Building carrying a gun was arrested on Tuesday, police say.
The U.S. Secret Service and Washington, D.C. Metropolitan Police found the man in a Washington hotel early Tuesday morning and interviewed him, sources said. They searched for a gun and found no weapon and no further action was taken at that time, they said.
“On Tuesday, January 21, the United States Capitol Police ... vehicle along First Street near East Capitol Street, Northeast, where the Library of Congress and US Supreme Court building are ...
James Madison suggested the idea of developing a congressional library at the new capital Washington City. Before that, the capital was located in Philadelphia and New York City.
A person arrested Monday at the Capitol with knives and Molotov cocktails was targeting Republican officials, court filings say.
Police say a man who entered the U.S. Capitol with a handgun in his possession and took a tour of the building has been arrested and faces weapons charges.
A Capitol Police officer has been suspended after a man with a gun was able to get past a security check at the Capitol Visitor
The 27-year-old Massachusetts man was arrested Tuesday after Capitol police officers found him leaving the Library of Congress and walking toward his car, police said in a news release.
JONES: A $250 million plan to fund private schools in Idaho faces opposition from rural communities and raises constitutional questions about religious education.