Police find ammunition in car of gunman who was shot down and left in 'critical condition' by Secret Service when he brandished his weapon at a White House check point and refused to drop it 

  • Armed man was shot at a Secret Service checkpoint one block west of the White House at around 3pm on Friday
  • He was shot once in the stomach after brandishing a gun and failing to drop it after repeated orders from agents
  • The suspect, said to be a man in his 20s, was rushed to hospital where he remains in a critical condition
  • President Obama was not at the White House and was playing golf but VP Biden was rushed to a secure area 
  • Ammunition for a .22 caliber firearm was reportedly found in a car that is believed to be owned by the suspect 

White House security zeroed in on this Toyota sedan filled with ammunition on Friday evening after an armed man brandished a gun at a Secret Service checkpoint. 

The suspect - who has not been identified but was described by witnesses as a man in his 20s - was shot once in the stomach by Secret Service officers one block west of the White House, leaving him in a critical condition. 

As he was taken to hospital, officers could be seen surrounding and raiding a white vehicle parked on Constitution Avenue. 

Federal officers found ammunition for a .22 caliber weapon in the front seat. It was then seen being carted off.

The building was put on lockdown and Vice President Joe Biden was rushed to a secure area as the gunman was taken to hospital. President Obama was not home at the time of the shooting and was out playing golf.  

The lockdown ended at around 4pm. 

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Officers were seen raiding this vehicle on Friday afternoon after a man brandished a gun at Secret Service officers outside the White House

Officers were seen raiding this vehicle on Friday afternoon after a man brandished a gun at Secret Service officers outside the White House

Ammunition for a .22 caliber weapon was found in the front seat of a Toyota sedan which they believe he parked on Constitution Avenue

Ammunition for a .22 caliber weapon was found in the front seat of a Toyota sedan which they believe he parked on Constitution Avenue

An armed man has been shot outside the White House after brandishing a weapon at a Secret Service checkpoint. Pictured, Secret Service outside the White House

An armed man has been shot outside the White House after brandishing a weapon at a Secret Service checkpoint. Pictured, Secret Service outside the White House

The man was shot by Secret Service officers one block west of the White House, leaving him in a critical condition. Pictured Secret Service officers outside

The man was shot by Secret Service officers one block west of the White House, leaving him in a critical condition. Pictured Secret Service officers outside

Gunfire: Visitors wrote on Twitter that they saw 'lots of people with guns' after shots were heard. Pictured, cops outside the White House

Gunfire: Visitors wrote on Twitter that they saw 'lots of people with guns' after shots were heard. Pictured, cops outside the White House

President Obama is seen inside his armored SUV as his motorcade makes his way back to Washington after playing golf at Andrews Air Force Base in Maryland, on Friday

President Obama is seen inside his armored SUV as his motorcade makes his way back to Washington after playing golf at Andrews Air Force Base in Maryland, on Friday

The shooting took place on 17th and E Streets - one block west of the White House - at around 3pm. The red circle shows were the shooting took place

On high alert: Armed police officers secured the scene outside the White House and the lockdown was lifted at around 4pm on Friday

On high alert: Armed police officers secured the scene outside the White House and the lockdown was lifted at around 4pm on Friday

The shooting took place on 17th and E Streets - one block west of the White House - at around 3pm.

A Secret Service spokesman told Daily Mail Online that officers repeatedly ordered the man to drop the weapon, but were left with no choice but to shoot him after he failed to stop.

Agents recovered his gun and gave him medical attention while they were waiting for an ambulance. 

The suspect is in custody in hospital and is in a critical condition.  

It is not clear why he had a gun outside the White House or what his intentions were. 

Brett Polivka, a 26-year-old visiting Washington, DC, from Texas, said he saw a man in his mid-20s holding a silver-colored gun which was pointed at the ground. 

'A couple officers drew their guns, went right at him andwithin two or three seconds we heard a gunshot,' Polivka said,adding that he believed it was an officer's shot. 

Visitors wrote on Twitter that they saw 'lots of people with guns' after shots were heard. 

President Obama left the White House shortly after 1pm for a round of golf at Andrews Air Force Base with three of his aides. He arrived there at about 1.30pm, meaning he was likely on the course when shots were fired about 90 minutes later.

Vice President Joe Biden was taken to a secure area of the White House.   

A member of the Secret Service stands guard on the South Lawn of the White House as a motorcade with President Obama departs for golf at Andrews Air Force Base

A member of the Secret Service stands guard on the South Lawn of the White House as a motorcade with President Obama departs for golf at Andrews Air Force Base

A chef was seen walking across the North Lawn of the White House as Secret Service officers stood guard in DC on Friday afternoon

A chef was seen walking across the North Lawn of the White House as Secret Service officers stood guard in DC on Friday afternoon

Armed police in green green uniforms stood guard outside the front of the White House on Friday afternoon following the shooting

Armed police in green green uniforms stood guard outside the front of the White House on Friday afternoon following the shooting

Secret Service agents were seen on the roof of the White House on Friday afternoon as they remained on guard following the shooting

Secret Service agents were seen on the roof of the White House on Friday afternoon as they remained on guard following the shooting

DC Fire and EMS tweeted that one person was taken to hospital in a critical condition. The armed man is in custody. Pictured, police at the scene

DC Fire and EMS tweeted that one person was taken to hospital in a critical condition. The armed man is in custody. Pictured, police at the scene

On guard: A U.S. Secret Service officer blocks Pennsylvania Avenue at 17th Street near the White House in Washington, DC, not far from the shooting

On guard: A U.S. Secret Service officer blocks Pennsylvania Avenue at 17th Street near the White House in Washington, DC, not far from the shooting

Evacuation: People were seen exiting the White House grounds after the shooting outside the building on Friday afternoon, but President Obama was out playing golf

Evacuation: People were seen exiting the White House grounds after the shooting outside the building on Friday afternoon, but President Obama was out playing golf

Secret Service officers were seen clearing the area and snipers were seen on the roof of the building minutes after the shooting.

President Obama was 'made aware' of the shooting, although it is not clear where he is now, or if he is still on the golf course.

'No one within or associated with the White House was injured, and everyone in the White House is safe and accounted for,' a White House official said. 'The president has been made aware of the situation.'

Several hundred members of the Knight Foundation’s Black Male Engagement (BME) project were waiting in a line to get inside the Eisenhower Executive Office Building (EEOB) when the single gunshot was fired.

They were there to receive the Presidential Volunteer Award, Eddie Connor of Detroit, Michigan, said.

Some participants were already inside the EEOB when the shooting occurred. Many were still waiting to have their IDs checked by Secret Service agents at the appointment gate.

Several BME members who spoke to Daily Mail Online said they did not hear the firearm go off. Others did not realize the loud noise was a gunshot until Secret Service agents moved them off of the White House grounds and onto the other side of the street in front of a row of private businesses.

‘They had my ID card. I was standing there, getting ready to go through, and the officers jumped out of a car, and said, everybody’s gotta go back that way,’ Nana Malaya Rucker, a Washington, D.C. resident and mother of one of the award winners said.

Mr Connor said the scene was ‘slight hysteria’.

‘Because now you saw the men actually arming themselves….yelling, and they’re saying, “Move, move immediately. Clear the scene”.‘

Baltimore, Maryland, yoga studio owner Changa Bell said he knew immediately that it was a gunshot. Bell said an officer had his ID in hand when the situation unfolded. He realized afterwards that the agent sent him off with the wrong ID when he was forced off the property. He had Rucker’s. His was still at the gate.

Bell said the officer ‘looked at his buddy like, "what was that?", and he was like "uhhh, it was a gunshot". Then he got it in the earpiece there was shooting, and then they were like "everybody go".’ 

The building was put on lockdown and Vice President Joe Biden was rushed to a secure area as the gunman was taken to hospital. Pictured, police at the scene on Friday

The building was put on lockdown and Vice President Joe Biden was rushed to a secure area as the gunman was taken to hospital. Pictured, police at the scene on Friday

The Secret Service were on high alert after the shooting and place the White House on lockdown for the best part of 2 hours
The Secret Service were on high alert after the shooting and place the White House on lockdown for the best part of 2 hours

The Secret Service were on high alert after the shooting and place the White House on lockdown for the best part of 2 hours

A Secret Service Police Officer works outside of the guard entrance on 17th St Northwest near the White House in Washington, DC

A Secret Service Police Officer works outside of the guard entrance on 17th St Northwest near the White House in Washington, DC

Securing the scene: An armed police officers agent stands guard near the White House after the shooting caused panic in Washington, DC

Securing the scene: An armed police officers agent stands guard near the White House after the shooting caused panic in Washington, DC

President Obama reportedly left the White House shortly after 1pm for a round of golf at Andrews Air Force Base and was not present during the shooting (file picture)

President Obama reportedly left the White House shortly after 1pm for a round of golf at Andrews Air Force Base and was not present during the shooting (file picture)

As Secret Service agents received word of the shooting, one witness was left a security checkpoint with a large guard dog.

‘I didn’t hear anything, so all of a sudden, he just said "sir, don’t move, just stay back there", and he took off running,’ Bishop Winslow of Baltimore said. ‘And he left me with the dog!’

Winslow the attack dog did not follow his hander. He stayed in the room and ‘never moved’.

‘I couldn’t believe it, he left me in there with the dog. I was scared to death,’ he said. Bishop gestured toward his suit pants and said he had to check after it was all over to make sure didn’t have ‘anything’ on his pants he needed to explain.

Laughing, Winslow admitted his reaction to the dog is ‘funny now’ – but it wasn’t at the time. ‘I have three German Shepherds, but that dog, I’m scared of,’ he said.

The last security breach at the White House came in April when a robber hopped the fence while leaving the scene of a crime. 

The White House was briefly locked down as Secret Service agents cleared the area around the presidential compound after a man jumped the fence alongside the Eisenhower Executive Office Building, a White House facility where presidential staffers work. 

Agents quickly detained the man, but not before he suffered a cut to his finger.  

A new design for the White House fence was released last month, with hopes that increasing its height by more than six feet would discourage 'jumpers'. 

The re-design included new security upgrades, like sensors to stop trespassers, and would make the barrier harder to scale by increasing the height from six feet to more than 11 feet.

Officials are trying to make the fence higher and stronger while still preserving the historical aesthetic, after a series of gate-jumping incidents in recent years.

The design was submitted publicly to U.S. Commission of Fine Arts in April and could be implemented in 2018.  

 

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