Police Lt Kimberly A Schneider told The Associated Press that Capitol Police officers on routine patrol spotted the parked, unoccupied vehicle on a street on the mall west of the Capitol at about 5 pm yesterday.
"Further investigation revealed a pressure cooker, and an odour of gasoline was detected," Schneider said, adding a Capitol Police bomb squad was called in because the vehicle was "suspicious in nature."
Asked if the "disruption" involved experts detonating those items, she said that was accurate. She said follow-up searching of the vehicle detected "nothing hazardous."
She said the bomb squad intervention came after authorities had set up a security perimeter around the site on 3rd Street in the US capital. She said that street was temporarily closed between Independence Avenue and Constitution Avenue while authorities investigated. It was unclear how many people were in or near that area at the time.
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Asked whether police had identified any threat to public safety, Schneider told AP via email: "If we can't determine whether or not an item is safe/dangerous, we'd have to treat it as dangerous until we determine otherwise. She added that was "why the items were safely disrupted, out of an abundance of caution." She didn't elaborate.
She added that the vehicle owner was located and her statement identified him as Israel Shimeles of the Washington suburb of Alexandria, Virginia.