FBI fatally shoots a man holding hostages in a California office building, police say

FBI agents respond after a man barricaded himself inside a building with hostages Tuesday in Bakersfield, Calif.

FBI agents respond after a man barricaded himself inside a building with hostages Tuesday in Bakersfield, Calif. (David Dennis, Associated Press)


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KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • The FBI fatally shot a man who had been holding hostages for 15 hours in Bakersfield, Cali. on Wednesday.
  • The standoff began Tuesday afternoon at a Chase Bank building with a bomb threat.
  • Two hostages were released Tuesday night; all were found unharmed after the shooting.

BAKERSFIELD, Cali. — A man who was holding hostages inside a California office building for more than 15 hours was shot and killed by the FBI early Wednesday, police said.

The hostages were found unharmed inside the downtown Bakersfield building that houses a bank and a school district office, the Bakersfield Police Department said in a statement.

The suspect was killed in "an officer-involved shooting" involving FBI personnel around 4:20 a.m., the department said.

The standoff began around 1 p.m. Tuesday when officers responded to a call of a bomb threat at the Chase Bank building, a four-story office building with dark-tinted glass windows all around. Police said the man had barricaded himself inside with several people.

The department's crisis negotiation team talked with the suspect by telephone and eventually two hostages were released Tuesday night, police said.

Nearby buildings, including City Hall and the police headquarters that are just a block away, were evacuated and some roads were temporarily closed during the hostage situation. Bakersfield, a city of about 380,000 residents, is the seat of largely rural Kern County and is about 100 miles (160 kms) northeast of Los Angeles.

A spokesperson for JPMorgan Chase said the bank branch is on the ground floor.

Officers established a perimeter around the area and warned the public to stay away.

"We have every single resource at our disposal out here to bring this to the safest resolution possible," Bakersfield police Sgt. Eric Celedon said Tuesday.

Jacob Davidson, a livestreamer known as Dad's Gone Live, was a block from the bank at his family's tattoo shop when he started getting calls about the bomb threat.

"I went into the bank's parking garage and watched the cops enter the back of the bank. This is the biggest police presence I've ever seen in this town," Davidson said.

His livestream captured through a window in the building a woman rocking back and forth Tuesday night before crouching below the window. Later, two hands could be seen waving.

The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

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