Officials later said the suspect taken into custody died and authorities identified the man on the run as the "white-hat" suspect, referencing photographs released by the FBI Thursday. Authorities warned he should be considered armed and dangerous.
The standoff in Watertown, Mass., erupted shortly
after the fatal shooting of a Massachusetts Institute of Technology police
officer. A transit police officer was also wounded in the Watertown fire fight,
officials confirmed to NBC affiliate WHDH.
Officials in Watertown were warning residents to
"stay in their homes and not open their doors unless a police officer is
there."
"There is a terrorist on the loose," said
one officer at an impromptu press conference at about 4:30 a.m. ET.
The suspect at large — believed to be the man who
physically placed the bags containing the homemade bombs which killed 3 and
injured 170 on Monday — was described as "dressed in a grey hoodie, light
skinned male, brown curly hair."
Watertown resident Andrew Kitzenberg described the
earlier police standoff outside his house. “They engaged in gunfire for a few
minutes,” Kitzenberg said. “They were also utilizing bombs, which sounded and
looked like grenades, while engaging in the gunfight. They also had what looked
like a pressure-cooker bomb.”
The gunmen used "bombs that looked like
grenades," Kitzenberg told NBC News.
Kitzenberg said when he looked out the window he
saw two people taking cover between a black Mercedes SUV and a sedan, and
watched them shooting 70 or 80 yards toward six Watertown police vehicles.
He said the pair took cover behind the Mercedes SUV
and were shooting westward toward the police officers. They also had backpacks.
“It was a fire fight,” he added. “There was a long
exchange of gunfire.”
Police with guns drawn search for a suspect on
April 19, 2013 in Watertown, Mass. Earlier, a Massachusetts Institute of
Technology campus police officer was shot and killed late Thursday night at the
school's campus in Cambridge. A short time later, police reported exchanging
gunfire with alleged carjackers in Watertown, a city near Cambridge. It's not
clear whether the shootings are related or whether either are related to the
Boston Marathon bombing.
One of the shooters then ran toward the officers,
while the other got into the SUV, Kitzenberg recounted.
The person on foot later fell to the ground, but
Kitzenberg said he was unable to tell whether he had been tackled or shot.
The other drove the SUV through the line of police
cars at the end of the street, he added.
Kitzenberg said that while he had a “very clear
view of the shooters,” he couldn’t see their faces but described them as
“average size, average height.”
During the gun battle, a bullet ended up in the
wall of Kitzenberg’s apartment, which is on the second level of a multi-family
home.
Rebecca Carbone, 30, stood on the street wearing
pajamas and a sweatshirt and had stepped out when she heard sirens.
"We heard a loud blast and we didn't know what
it was," Carbone said. "It sounded like a car backfiring."
John Grimes, 69, a retired letter carrier, said
that he heard three loud explosions, "and you don't hear explosions at
night a lot."
The tense situation in Watertown followed an
hours-long lockdown at MIT, where the campus police officer was shot and killed
while investigating a disturbance on the Cambridge campus.
Even as police swept the campus, there were reports
of a violent car chase and then an extremely heavy police presence in
Watertown, which is only about four miles away.
The events began unfolding with reports of shots
fired on the MIT campus at 10:48 p.m. ET, and the situation remained
"active and extremely dangerous" for hours, according to MIT's
emergency website. It was later reported that a campus officer had been fatally
shot several times.
The MIT police officer was found shot multiple
times in his vehicle, the Middlesex District Attorney’s office said in a news
release. Authorities launched an investigation into the circumstances of the
shooting and determined that two males were involved in the shooting.
A short time later, police received reports of an
armed carjacking by two males in the area of Third Street in Cambridge, the
DA’s statement read.
“The victim was carjacked at gunpoint by two males
and was kept in the car with the suspects for approximately a half hour. The
victim was released at a gas station on Memorial Drive in Cambridge. He was not
injured.”
Police went in pursuit of the stolen vehicle,
following it into Watertown. During the chase, explosive devices were
reportedly thrown from the car by the suspects, the DA’s statement said.
A Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority police
officer was also severely injured in an ensuing gunfire exchange between the
police and the suspects in the area of Dexter and Laurel streets.
The university expressed its condolences in a
statement: "MIT is heartbroken by the news that an MIT Police officer was
shot and killed in the line of duty on Thursday night on campus, near Building
32 (the Stata Center). Our thoughts are now with the family."


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