Gunman takes hostages at U.S. Discovery Channel

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[image: James Jay Lee is pictured in this undated photograph. MSNBC on
September 1, 2010 identified Lee as the armed man who police believe may
have explosives strapped to his body and has taken a number of hostages in
the Discovery Channel headquarters building in suburban Washington.
REUTERS/Handout]
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By Maggie 
Fox<http://blogs.reuters.com/search/journalist.php?edition=us&n=maggie.fox&;>

SILVER SPRING, Maryland | Wed Sep 1, 2010 4:13pm EDT

(Reuters) - A man carrying a gun and possibly with explosives strapped to
his body took a small number of hostages in the Discovery Channel
headquarters building in suburban Washington on Wednesday.

"Right now we have an unconfirmed number of hostages, a small number of
hostages that are with the suspect at this point," Tom Manger, Montgomery
County police chief, told reporters.

The man entered the building wearing what appeared to be metallic canister
devices on his front and back and he pulled out a hand gun, Manger said.

"The man told everyone to just stay still, and he has remained on the first
floor area," he said.

It was unconfirmed whether a shot had been fired or whether there were any
injuries, Manger said.

A U.S. law enforcement official said he believed the hostage-taker was named
James Lee. A man called James Lee of San Diego was arrested in February 2008
after throwing money into the air in a protest outside the Discovery
building, the Montgomery County Gazette reported that year.

Police sealed off the area around the building and SWAT teams were at the
scene in the suburb of Silver Spring, Maryland. The building was ordered
evacuated and children were removed from a day-care center.

"He appears to have some sort of explosive device on his person," police
Captain Paul Starks told reporters. He said the police were in contact with
the suspect, who had made some demands that police would not go into.

Police were watching the suspect on the building's closed-circuit security
system.

ENVIRONMENTAL DEMANDS

Discovery employees posted updates on the situation on Twitter including a
link to a website,savetheplanetprotest.com/, in which demands are made
against Discovery to cover environmental issues. It was not confirmed that
these demands were made by the man barricaded in the building.

Police in nearby Takoma Park, Maryland, sent out an e-mail to residents that
said, "an unknown, armed Asian male (is) barricaded in the building with at
least one hostage."

Montgomery County Police Corporal Dan Friz said of the suspect: "His
concerns are with the Discovery Corporation right now." He would not go into
further details.

A reporter from the local ABC affiliate said he saw an ambulance crew wheel
a gurney into the building about an hour after the incident began at 1 p.m.
EDT, but there was no official word of casualties.

Discovery Communications says it reaches 1.5 billion subscribers in more
than 180 countries with the Discovery Channel, TLC, Animal Planet, Science
Channel and Planet Green networks.

Among the demands to Discovery on savetheplanetprotest.com were calls for an
end to programs "promoting War" and those "encouraging the birth of any more
parasitic human infants." "Saving the Planet means saving what's left of the
non-human Wildlife by decreasing the Human population," the website said.

(Reporting by 
<http://blogs.reuters.com/search/journalist.php?edition=us&n=jackie.frank&;>Jackie
Frank<http://blogs.reuters.com/search/journalist.php?edition=us&n=jackie.frank&;>
, Bill 
Trott<http://blogs.reuters.com/search/journalist.php?edition=us&n=bill.trott&;>
, Diane 
Bartz<http://blogs.reuters.com/search/journalist.php?edition=us&n=diane.bartz&;>
, Xavier 
Briand<http://blogs.reuters.com/search/journalist.php?edition=us&n=xavier.briand&;>
, David 
Storey<http://blogs.reuters.com/search/journalist.php?edition=us&n=david.storey&;>;
writing by Jackie Frank, editing by Vicki Allen)

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