A federal grand jury indicted 42-year-old Omar Gonzalez on Tuesday, over allegations that he jumped a fence and the eluded guards to enter the White House earlier this month.
In a statement, the Department of Justice said the grand jury turned over a three count indictment against Gonzalez: The first — "entering a restricted building or grounds, while carrying a deadly or dangerous weapon" — is a federal offense, while the other two — "carrying a dangerous weapon outside a home or place of business, and unlawful possession of ammunition" — are crimes in the District of Columbia.
According to the indictment, Gonzalez was apprehended inside the White House, where Secret Service agents found "a black folding knife" inside his front right pants pocket. Police found "hundreds of rounds of ammunition, both in boxes and in magazines, two hatchets, and a machete" inside his car.
The incident has embarrassed the Secret Service, which had at first said Gonzalez was unarmed and stopped just inside the White House. Later reports by The Washington Post revealed that Gonzalez ran through most of the White House's main level.
Today, the paper has yet another stunning revelation: Gonzalez was actually apprehended by an off-duty Secret Service agent.
"The agent who finally tackled Omar Gonzalez had been serving on the security detail for President Obama's daughters and had just seen the family depart via helicopter minutes earlier," the paper reports. "He happened to be walking through the house when chaos broke out and the intruder dashed through the main foyer, according to two people familiar with the incident."
Earlier today, as Scott reported, Secret Service director Julia Pierson faced a tough inquiry by lawmakers.
"An intruder walked in the front door of the White House," Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Calif.) told Pierson. "That is amazing — and unacceptable. Common sense tells us this was a significant security failure — not an instance of praiseworthy restraint."
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