Family Identifies Woman Who Died After Washington Car Chase

Default featured image
Share:

Family members have identified the body of a woman who died after a tense car chase through the streets of Washington that prompted a lockdown of the U.S. Capitol, their lawyer said Friday.

Miriam Carey’s family members plan to discuss the incident later on Friday, when they return to their New York home, attorney Eric Sanders said in a posting on his law firm’s Facebook page. They identified her body at the office of the medical examiner in Washington, Sanders said.

Carey, 34, had her 1-year-old baby in the car with her on Thursday when she tried to drive through a barrier near the White House, then sped away toward Capitol Hill and led police on a high-speed chase that ended when her car got stuck on a median and police shot her.

Carey had suffered from depression, ABC News quoted her mother as saying, while a neighbor who lived in her Stamford, Connecticut, apartment building said she had been acting erratically.

“She had post-partum depression after having the baby,” said Idella Carey, who identified herself as Miriam Carey’s mother, ABC News reported on Friday. “A few months later, she got sick. She was depressed. … She was hospitalized.”

Investigators probing the incident are focusing on whether Carey had mental problems that triggered her actions, a U.S. official speaking on condition of anonymity said on Friday.

Carey had no previous run-ins with the U.S. Secret Service, which is responsible for White House security, a law enforcement official said.

An officer at Washington’s Metropolitan Police headquarters confirmed that Carey was the driver of the black Infiniti coupe involved in the incident, but declined to provide further details.

Carey’s daughter had been unharmed when taken in by the District of Columbia Child and Family Services on Friday, said Mindy Good, a spokeswoman for the agency.

“She’s fine,” Good said of the child, who she declined to name. “Safe and fine, so far.”

Unusual Behavior
Outside a Stamford, Conn., building where Carey had lived, most neighbors said they knew little about the woman. But one man, a 59-year-old resident of the building who would only identify himself as “O.V.,” said she had been behaving unusually recently.

“She seemed nice, but was very erratic lately, was acting very strange,” he said. “She seemed like she was OK one minute, and then wasn’t making any sense the next.

“She would often speed her car in and out of the parking lot here, and that was something that really concerned me,” he said.

The incident, which came as Congress was debating how to resolve the current shutdown of the federal government, was initially reported as a shooting. But law enforcement sources said the woman did not shoot a gun and there was no indication she had one.

Law enforcement investigators had largely completed their search of Carey’s Stamford apartment on Friday and reopened the building, which had been evacuated a day earlier, to residents.

Stamford Mayor Michael Pavia said the investigation had been handed over to the FBI.

Two officers were hurt in Thursday’s incident. One was a Secret Service officer who was struck by the suspect’s car outside the White House, Donovan said.

The other was a Capitol Police officer whose car struck a barricade during the mid-afternoon chase, which ranged over about a mile and a half and lasted just a few minutes, officials said.

Security was tight near the Capitol after Thursday’s incident, just three weeks after a government contractor opened fire at the Washington Navy Yard, about 1.5 miles from the Capitol, killing 12 people and wounding three others before he was shot dead by police.

In 1998, a gunman burst through a security checkpoint at the Capitol and killed two Capitol Police officers in an exchange of fire that sent tourists and other bystanders diving for cover. The suspect, Russell Eugene Weston Jr., was not charged with a crime because of apparent mental instability.


Additional reporting by Susan Cornwell and Ian Simpson in Washington and Edward Upright in New York; Writing by Scott Malone; Editing by Vicki Allen and David Gregorio

© 2013 Thomson Reuters. All rights reserved.

Share:

Related topics:

See an error in this article?

Send us a correction

To contact us or to submit an article

Click and play our featured shows

Should You Be Afraid of These Prophetic Events?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gyuam0hh5Wg The recent total solar eclipse on Apr. 8, has sparked intense discussions about its potential significance when it comes to biblical prophecy. Jim Staley of Passion for Truth Ministries shared his insights on the celestial event during an interview...

Prophetic Word: Angels Are Coming to Our Aid

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hfuv3hhEyNs The spiritual warfare taking place in our nation’s capital is at a fevered pitch. Recently, author Dutch Sheets shared a prophetic dream that his brother, Tim Sheets, had concerning the uprooting of Baal’s roots that have taken hold of...

Heinous Law Allows Parents to Transition Infants

A dangerous law is taking gender identity to the max. In the middle of April, the German Parliament decided to pass the “Self-Determination Act” or the SBGG. As Reduxx Magazine noted, this bill “establishes ‘gender identity’ as a protected characteristic...

93-Year-Old’s Remarkable Vision About Heaven

https://youtu.be/VwgeJspIIlc 93-year-old Doris Sumner’s supernatural experience with God has changed her entire life. Sharing her testimony through Seeking His Presence Ministries, Sumner says this vision started during a time of meditating and reading the Word of God with her husband....

5 Strong Solutions to Protect Your Mind

By Kenza Haddock A recent new mental-health related TikTok trend has gained traction across the app’s approximately 1.5 billion followers, claiming to “help” people overcome the pain of intrusive thoughts. The TikTok trend encourages users to give in to their...

Mandisa’s Celebration of Life Ceremony to be Livestreamed

Christian artist Mandisa Hundley will have her life and legacy celebrated this weekend after her death on Thursday, April 18. As The Tennessean reported, Hundley, more affectionately known as Mandisa by fans, will be celebrated in two different services. The...

Can You Honor Your Parents Without Obeying Them?

By Rabbi Eric Tokajer We live in a broken world filled with broken families—families in which many sons and daughters have been raised to believe in the G-D of the Bible and to be responsible to live by the Ten...

1 2 3 4 5 97 98 99 100
Scroll to Top