Crime & Safety

Police at Stamford Home of Woman Shot Dead at U.S. Capitol

She is the registered owner of the Infiniti sedan that tried ram through barricades at the White House, according to news reports.

By Gary Jeanfaivre
and David Gurliacci

Update 7:05 p.m.:

Michael Palmer, owner of Bridge Street Wienery, at 17 Bridge St., across the street from the apartment complex, said police arrived with patrol car lights flashing at about 5:15 p.m.

His business promptly dried up at the small restaurant specializing in hot dogs, as police blocked off both ends of the street to vehicle traffic. Police told him they didn't know how long it would last, he said.

Anybody curious enough to want a front row seat to the police and news media activity is welcome to grab a meal at the eatery, Palmer said. But yo'll have to walk to get there.

Update 6:43 p.m.:

Jose Guillermo, a resident of Woodside Green Apartments, has been waiting half an hour for police to let him back inside his own home.

He saw television reports of the Washington, DC incident in a doctor's office waiting room.

He never thought the incident would hit so close to home, he said. Actually at home, in fact. "Everything is related like a net."

Guillermo said he didn't recognize the name of the woman reported to be at the heart of the incident, Miriam Carey, but he wondered if he'd seen her in the two months he's lived at the complex.

Update 6:32 p.m.:

The New Haven register reports: "A law enforcement source identified the woman to the New Haven Register as Miriam Carey, a 34-year-old dental hygienist."

Update 6:25 p.m.:

At least four helicopters are over the Woodside Green co-op apartment complex off of Bridge and Summer streets in Stamford, as Stamford police stand watch with patrol car lights flashing.

The apartment complex is said to be the home of a woman shot on Capitol Hill this afternoon after trying to ram barricades there and at the White House.

The helicopters, stationary as dragonflies far above the complex, blare down a deafening racket through the neighborhood (close by Ridgeway Shopping Center across Summer Street. 

Update 5:40 p.m.:

The woman who sped from the White House to Capitol Hill was shot dead by police and her child was taken to a hospital, the Washington Post reports.

"The woman driving the car was unarmed, law enforcement sources said. All the shots in the incident, which ocurred about 2:20 p.m., were fired by police trying to stop her," according to a 4:49 p.m. update on the newspaper's website. 

Update 5:38 p.m.:

"Police are descending on the Woodside Green co-op complex," the Stamford Advocate reported at 5:30 p.m. "A police official on the scene confirmed their presence is tied to the Capitol shooting."

Update 5:34 p.m.:

The Stamford woman reported to have been shot after ramming a car into a U.S. Capitol barricade may have been involved in an earlier incident at the Capitol, according to ABC News.

Nightline, a part of ABC News tweeted at 5:27 p.m.: "Police have arrived at Stamford, CT house of 34yo woman authorities are trying to confirm is suspect in earlier incident at Capitol via @ABC"

Update 5:29 p.m.:

"Just in: Police have arrived at Stamford, CT house of 34yo woman authorities are trying to confirm is suspect in earlier incident at Capitol," ABC News tweeted at 5:23 p.m.

Update 5:25 p.m.:

"Rep. Michael McCaul, R-Tex., who said he was briefed by the Homeland Security Department, said the woman was killed," theAssociated Press reported.

Update 5:13 p.m.:


"After making an initial identification of the suspect, police are trying to confirm that the suspect is a 34-year-old woman from Stamford, Connecticut, with a history of mental health issues,ABC News reports." -- from the ABC News website, which reports the woman had a troubled past.

Update 5:04 p.m.:

The woman involved in the chase and shooting at the White House and Capitol Hill was shot and may be dead, according to the Associated Press. A small child with her was taken to a hospital.

A police officer received non-life-threatening injuries, according to the AP.

Update 4:59 p.m. (reports aggregated from elsewhere on the Web):

A woman, driving a black Infiniti registered to a Stamford woman born in 1979, tried to pass a barracade at the White House, then sped toward the U.S. Capitol building, where the car became involved in a shooting incident Thursday afternoon, according to numerous news reports.

The name of the woman had not been released as of 4:33 p.m.,according to the Stamford Advocate, which reported that a local law enforcement official confirmed the car was registered to a Stamford woman.

The car struck a police car at the Capitol before crashing into a barricade there, according to a New York Times report.

Update 4:41 p.m.:

A car connected to this afternoon's shooting at the U.S. Capitol building is registered to a Stamford woman born in 1979,according to an NBC News report.

"Police said a woman rammed her car into a White House gate on Thursday, then led authorities on a high-speed chase to the U.S. Capitol, where she opened fire, police said. She was shot," NBC reported on its website.


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