Tuesday, March 31, 2015

Escaped prisoner arrested in DC - Washington Post



The lockdown on Inova Fairfax Hospital has been lifted and nearby roads have been reopened, but the search continues for an armed prisoner who escaped from the hospital on Tuesday, according to police. (Reuters)



March 31 at 11:49 AM

An escaped prisoner who overpowered a private security guard at Inova Fairfax Hospital in Falls Church and later carjacked two people was arrested in D.C. shortly before noon, police said.


Police identified the prisoner as Wossen Assaye, 42, who was apprehended in Southeast after a nearly nine-hour long search. Neither carjacking victim was injured, police said.


The incident quickly unfolded Tuesday morning, with area residents being warned to lock their doors and not to go outside as authorities searched. The escaped prisoner, who took the security guard’s gun, is known by police as the “Bicycle Bandit” and is believed to be involved in several bank robberies in the area, escaping on a bicycle.


About 7 a.m., police said the escaped prisoner allegedly carjacked a woman at Backlick Road and Cindy Lane in the Annandale area. The prisoner took off in the stolen 2002 silver Toyota Camry.


But by 10 a.m., police said they had found the Toyota and they were pursuing another car that the escapee was believed to have carjacked. That car was described as a 2008 dark silver Hyundai Elantra. It was last seen in the area of Monterey Drive and Oak Court near Annandale. It has Virginia plates of XTU-5024. Assaye was spotted on foot near the scene before the second carjacking, police said, and is believed to have left the Hyundai in that area.


Initially the escapee was wearing a hospital gown and no shoes. By mid-morning, police said they thought he had changed clothes and might be wearing a dark-colored jacket and blue jeans.


Assaye’s mother — Hari Assaye who lives in Fairfax — said Tuesday morning that police had been to her home. She said her son had not contacted her since escaping from the hospital.


She cried as she said that her son had been on drugs. She said she last talked to him last week when he was being held at a jail in Alexandria.


“I told him ‘God doesn’t give up on you,’ ” she said. She said her son appeared to listen to her but didn’t say very much in response.


Hari Assaye pleaded that her son turn himself in to authorities.


“We just want him to give himself in to police,” she said. “We are praying he will do that.”


The incident at the hospital began about 3 a.m. when Assaye was in the custody of a private security company at the hospital. Assaye was being held on federal charges for armed bank robbery, Fairfax police said. He was taken to the hospital for medical treatment after he tried to harm himself.


Police said a private security company was hired to guard him at the hospital. According to the police account, a struggle ensued between the guard and Assaye inside a hospital room. Assaye overpowered the guard and took a gun. Police said one shot was fired but no one was injured.


Fairfax County Police Chief Ed Roessler did not specify who fired the shot. Assaye “gained control of the gun,” Roessler said. He said two guards were watching Assaye at the time of the incident, but only one guard was involved in the struggle.


Assaye has been charged with escaping federal officials in connection with fleeing the hospital, according to charging documents.


Roessler said authorities are also looking for Assaye’s girlfriend. Assaye’s mother said she didn’t know her son’s girlfriend’s name. She said she believed the two lived together. Police have not released the name of his girlfriend but released a picture of her.


Several witnesses described the fast-moving situation at the scenes of the two carjackings.


In the first carjacking near Cindy Lane, Preston Hall, who lives nearby, said he was awoken around 7 a.m. to the sound of a massive crash. He looked out his window and saw a light-colored car had smashed into two vehicles in his driveway. The car began to back down his driveway with one of the doors open. He said a woman was in the passenger seat “screaming bloody murder.” She then jumped out of the car and ran away. The driver sped off in the vehicle, he said.


At the second carjacking near Monetery Drive, Don Williams, who is a landscape worker, was working nearby when it happened. He said he saw a car speeding down the driveway of a home on Cherry Lane and the homeowner running in front of a car, yelling “My car is getting stolen!”


The homeowner, Williams said, jumped out of the way and the driver nearly ran over the homeowner before speeding off.


Assaye is described as being 6 feet tall and weighing 170 pounds. Police said the car he’s believed to be in has front-end damage and Virginia license plate XZP-8513. Earlier, police had put out an incorrect license plate number of XZP-8153. Fairfax police said the Toyota was reported stolen from a nearby residence.


Officials in the Alexandria sheriff’s office said Assaye was booked into the William G. Truesdale Adult Detention Center in Alexandria on federal charges on March 21. On March 27, he attempted suicide and was transported to Inova Fairfax hospital for treatment of his injuries.


Under an agreement with the U.S. Marshals Service, federal prisoners are held at the Alexandria detention center, according to Amy Bertsch, a spokeswoman for the Alexandria Sheriff’s Office.


Bertsch said Alexandria sheriff’s deputies remained with Assaye until Saturday afternoon and then turned custody over to security officers hired under a contract with the U.S. Marshals office. Assaye escaped from the hospital under the watch of two private security officers.


Desmond Proctor, a spokesman for the U.S. Marshals, declined to comment Tuesday on the incident or discuss the agency’s policy for maintaining the custody of prisoners in medical settings. He said they expected to release a statement later today.


Fairfax police said they were searching for Assaye and have a heavy presence in the area of the hospital, which is on Gallows Road.


The hospital lockdown was lifted around 8 a.m. Several roads in the area were closed but have since reopened. Hospital employees during the lockdown were told to go to Falls Church High School, where a shuttle bus would pick them up.


In a Twitter message, police advised those in the area to “be aware of your surroundings” and to call authorities for anyone who appeared suspicious.


Assaye is suspected of being involved in a dozen bank robberies in Northern Virginia, dating back to October 2013. He is charged with just one — the March 20 robbery of Apple Federal Credit Union on Sir Viceroy Drive in the Alexandria section of Fairfax County — but investigators believe 11 others bear striking similarities.


In most of those cases, according to the FBI affidavit, a man matching Assaye’s description entered a bank with a cellphone to his ear, then approached a teller and demanded money. The man sometimes showed a handgun, though he often simply threatened violence or implied it by way of a note, according to the affidavit. He sometimes fled the scene on a bicycle, according to the affidavit.


In total, according to the affidavit, the robber made off with more than $30,000.


Assaye — who, according to the affidavit, was convicted of burglary and robbery in the late 1990s — was in prison from 2000 to May 2013. Though it is unclear precisely how, he seemed to have been on the FBI’s radar before the latest robbery.


According to the affidavit, agents used cellphone tower data to analyze his movements in December and January and found that his phone made contact with cellphone towers near the scene of five robberies, around the time they occurred.


After the March 20 robbery at Apple Federal Credit Union, agents conducted surveillance at the Arlington apartment building where Assaye stayed with his father and watched a man who looked like Assaye get out of and into a black Volvo.


The agents followed the vehicle as it drove to a CVS in Falls Church — where Assaye put some clothes in a bag and handled what appeared to be multiple license plates — but lost sight of it later, as the driver, possibly aware of the surveillance, sped to more than 100 mph and jumped a median.


The agents arrested Assaye when he returned to his father’s apartment that afternoon. He was initially charged with a weapons offense, though that charge was dropped and he was instead charged with bank robbery on March 25. Agents said they found $1,600 in a zipper purse in his left jacket pocket.


Matt Zapotosky and Peter Hermann contributed to this report.



Dana Hedgpeth is a Post reporter, working the early morning, reporting on traffic, crime and other local issues.



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