More background: Shep Smith says he is a delivery man who tried to kidnap a woman in a high-dollar neighborhood. She got away, ran back into the house, and he fled. Um, "semi-automatic hand grenade"?
entura County attempted kidnapping ends with freeway standoff
The Associated Press
Last Updated: June 7, 2005, 11:55:20 AM PDT
ALHAMBRA, Calif. (AP) - A suspected foiled kidnapper led California Highway Patrol officers on a 2 1/2-hour freeway chase that ended with a gunpoint standoff after the CHP slammed the fleeing minivan and sent it spinning into a soundwall.
Authorities boxed the stalled van on a freeway east of downtown Los Angeles after a pursuit that began in the Thousand Oaks area of neighboring Ventura County, authorities said.
After nearly 30 minutes, however, the driver had not left the minivan.
SWAT teams surrounded the van with armored vehicles and a helicopter landed in opposite lanes. Traffic on busy Interstate 10 was backed up in both directions for miles.
The chase began around 8:30 a.m. after a man posing as a delivery courier tried to kidnap a woman in the wealthy Lake Sherwood area of the unincorporated Thousands Oaks-area, Ventura County sheriff's spokesman Eric Nishimoto said.
He met the unidentified woman on the porch, produced a handgun and a ransom note for money and "demanded that she go with him," Nishimoto said.
As they were leaving, however, the woman mouthed to a watching neighbor to call 911, Nishimoto said.
Then "she turned and ran back into the house and he took off," Nishimoto said.
It was unclear whether knew the woman, Nishimoto said.
A short time later, sheriff's deputies spotted the minivan, which fled onto a freeway. CHP officers chased it through two counties at speeds ranging from 35 mph to 70 mph, depending on traffic, CHP Officer Tomiekia Johnson said.
At one point, officers laid down a spike strip that blew out the van's rear tires but the van continued to drive on its rims. A CHP car bumped the vehicle three times, causing it to spin out of control briefly and at one point it appeared to nearly hit a road crew truck on the shoulder of an offramp, but the driver recovered and sped back onto the freeway.
The third time, however, the van spun completely around and struck a soundwall, jarring the bumper loose and coming to a halt.
"We're at a standoff with the suspect," who was believed to still be carrying the handgun, Johnson said.
Err, sarcasm. Sorry. FNC were getting very excited earlier about describing the (unknown) weapon as "semi-automatic"... so much so that I thought I must have been tuned to CNN... so I thought I would describe the Holy Hand Grenade of Antioch as semi-automatic too. Now count to three.