A police
chase in Washington DC has ended in gunfire, sparking panic at the White House
and US Capitol and leaving a woman dead and two officers injured.
The chase
and wreck that preceded the shooting were neither an act of terrorism nor an
accident, police said.
A female
driver was shot dead by police. A one-year-old girl was taken from the car by
the officers.
The shooting
happened two weeks after 12 people were killed and three injured in a shooting
at nearby Navy Yard.
The incident
began at 14:12 local time (18:12 GMT) when a suspect in a black Infiniti sedan
attempted to bypass fencing at the outer perimeter of the White House, police
said.
The suspect
fled the scene and led officers on a high-speed chase through Washington DC
toward the US Capitol.
The driver,
later identified as a woman by authorities, then attempted to bypass barriers
along the western front lawn of the Capitol, where the Senate and House of
Representatives sit.
News video
shows officers surrounding the black car with guns drawn. The driver then sped
away as officers appeared to open fire. Police gave chase.
During the
chase, a police car struck a barrier and the suspect hit a US Secret Service
vehicle.
At that
point, the suspect's vehicle crashed near the Capitol.
'We heard
pops'
Metropolitan
Police Chief Cathy Lanier said both Capitol Police and Secret Service officers
fired on the vehicle in two different locations during the incident.
"The
suspect was struck by gunfire and... has been pronounced" dead, she said.
A
one-year-old child was found in the vehicle after it crashed and taken to a
local hospital, and is now in protective custody, police said.
Authorities
declined to comment on the suspect. But multiple officials said they believed
the incident was not related to terrorism.
Officials
have not said whether the driver of the vehicle was armed.
"I'm
pretty confident this is not an accident," Ms Lanier said, adding that the
suspect attempted to bypass multiple barriers around heavily protected buildings.
A Secret
Service officer and Capitol Police officer were injured during the pursuit.
Chief Kim
Dine of the Capitol Police said the injured Capitol Police officer, a 23-year
veteran of the force, was "doing well" as of Thursday evening.
Senators, congressmen,
staffers and journalists reported hearing shots from inside the US Capitol
building.
The
surrounding buildings were briefly locked down and lawmakers and staffers were
instructed to shelter in place.
"We
heard pops, three, four, five pops," said Senator Sherrod Brown, who said
he was outside the building and ordered to duck behind a car.
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