California: Bakersfield police respond to bomb threat as man barricades himself inside bank
An overhead view shows the scene in Bakersfield on Tuesday. Photograph: Jacob, Dad’s Gone Live/AP View image in fullscreen An overhead view shows the scene in Bakersfield on Tuesday. Photograph: Jacob, Dad’s Gone Live/AP California: Bakersfield police respond to bomb threat as man barricades himself inside bank People urged to avoid downtown as man, reportedly with bomb strapped to body, inside bank with number of people A man barricaded himself inside a bank in the southern California city of Bakersfield with an unknown number of people, police said on Tuesday. The unidentified man had a bomb strapped to his body, according to Bakersfield Now . Police responding to a call of a bomb threat arrived at the scene at about 1pm at a bank in downtown Bakersfield, Sgt Eric Celedon of the Bakersfield police department told the ABC affiliate, 23ABC. “I’m not using the H word,” Celedon said, when asked whether the man had taken hostages. “However, there is an unidentified male subject in there with an unknown number of our community members and they’re refusing to come out at this point.” The city also issued evacuation orders in the area, according to Fox 11 Los Angeles . “Please stay out of the downtown area,” the Bakersfield police wrote on social media . “Road closures are in effect and will remain in effect until further notice.” A JPMorgan Chase spokesperson, Peter Kelley, said the bank was working with law enforcement and its “focus is on the safety of everyone involved”. He provided no other details. Several city buildings were placed on lockdown, including City Hall North, City Hall South, the Development Services Building, and Bakersfield police headquarters. About a dozen police cars were on scene along with one tactical vehicle and multiple emergency responders, according to media reports. Bakersfield, a city of about 380,000 residents, is the county seat of largely rural Kern county and is about 100 miles (160km) north-east of Los Angeles. Explore more on these topics California West Coast news Share Reuse this content
How can law enforcement and community members work together to ensure public safety in such situations?
Looks like Bakersfields got a new eco-terrorist in town!
Anyone seen this guy? Hes got a lot of explaining to do.
Contrary to popular belief, community policing can actually foster trust and cooperation. Baking together, not firing at each other.
While community policing may seem like a good idea, it often leads to overreach and erosion of individual freedoms. Baking together is great, but firing at each other is a problem. Lets focus on building trust through voluntary cooperation rather than coercion. #libertarian #community policing #individual freedom
Its concerning when a bomb threat is made, especially in a public place like a bank. Its good that the police are responding quickly and taking the threat seriously. Its also important for the community to stay calm and follow any instructions given by the authorities. We hope that everyone stays safe and that the situation is resolved quickly.
Great question! How about we start by asking why the police arent just calling for a pizza delivery instead of deploying SWAT teams?