This photo sent via Twitter by the Dallas Police Department shows gunshot damage to a squad car Saturday, June 13, 2015, in Dallas. Multiple gunmen toting automatic weapons opened fire on officers outside Dallas Police headquarters early Saturday morning, before one man fled the scene being chased by police in what witnesses described as an armored van, according to Dallas Police Chief David Brown. (Dallas Police Department, via AP)
DALLAS (AP) — Authorities say they've confirmed the death of a suspect accused of opening fire on officers outside the Dallas police headquarters.
Police said Saturday that the suspect was found dead inside his armored van at a parking lot in suburban Hutchins, where he had been in an hours-long standoff with SWAT team officers.
Police Chief David Brown had said a sniper hit the suspect shortly after 5 a.m. and that officers had lost contact with him for several hours afterward. But officers did not directly approach the van due to the threat of explosives inside.
Witnesses say the suspect fired several rounds at officers and rammed his van into a squad car before fleeing.
No one was injured in the gunfire.
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DALLAS (AP) — At least one gunman opened fire on officers outside of police headquarters in Dallas early Saturday, spraying squad cars with bullets before fleeing in a van, which officers followed to a suburban parking lot and surrounded, beginning a standoff, the police chief said.
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Witnesses described seeing as many as three other suspects taking part in the attack, but police Chief David Brown said at a news conference that conflicting accounts made it difficult to determine how many people may have been involved. Despite a hail of gunshots, including some that hit police vehicles, nobody was wounded, he said.
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According to Brown, the shootout began at around 12:30 a.m., when the suspect or suspects parked in front of the department's headquarters south of downtown and began firing. At least one assailant later drove off in a dark-colored van, which witnesses described as armored, but not before ramming a police cruiser. The moment was caught on cellphone video shot from a nearby balcony in which several shots can be heard.
Officers trailed the van to a Jack in the Box parking lot in Hutchins, a Dallas suburb, where a SWAT team had it surrounded, Brown said. They had been speaking to a man inside who identified himself as James Boulware and who said he blames police for losing custody of his son and "accusing him of being a terrorist."
The gunman also said he had explosives in the van, which appeared to be outfitted with gun ports in the sides.
Brown said police didn't know if there was anyone else in the van, but that witnesses reported seeing as many as four people taking part in the attack, including some who may have been strategically positioned in elevated positions. He asked anyone who may have witnessed the attack or shot cellphone footage of it to reach out to the authorities to help with the investigation.
Police said they found two explosive devices near the headquarters building and cleared them away. They also evacuated a nearby housing complex as a precaution.
Are in process of trying to gain access into the armored susp vehicle by taking out the windshield with our .50cal rifle #DallasPDShooting
— Dallas Police Depart (@DallasPD) June 13, 2015
One shot into susp veh windshield just went in with .50 cal. #DallasPDShooting
— Dallas Police Depart (@DallasPD) June 13, 2015
RE: PT – Goal is to enable access inside that susp vehicle. #DallasPDShooting We're advising to alert the public so no alarm at gunfire
— Dallas Police Depart (@DallasPD) June 13, 2015
Ladarrick Alexander and his fiancée, Laquita Davis, were driving back toward the police station to their nearby apartment when they heard 15 to 20 gunshots in quick succession.
Seconds later, police could be seen swarming an unmarked van that appeared to have crashed into a police car, they said.
They turned around and were parked outside the police perimeter about two blocks away, where they heard the sound of one detonation at about 4:30 am and smoke coming up in the air.
Police headquarters is in a former warehouse district where a boutique hotel and several new apartment buildings have been opened.
"We don't see too much going around here at all," Alexander said.
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