Showing posts with label Lafayette Park. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lafayette Park. Show all posts

Saturday, June 9, 2012

D.C. Car Bomb Attempt?


First responders arrive at the scene of a SUV that crashed into the lobby of a building at Connecticut Avenue and L Street NW, Washington, D.C., Friday evening, June 8, 2012. Photo courtesy: Maureen Mathis.


North of Lafayette Park (see "Fayette Factor"), the patio at the Connecticut Avenue location of Morton's The Steakhouse overlooks Washington D.C.'s infamous K Street Corridor, and the Bar is known locally as a relaxing retreat for the government elite. But the calm was disturbed Friday evening, about 7:30-7:45 pm. One floor below, chaos visited.


“I felt a crash,” said a female eyewitness who was in the bar area of Morton’s The Steakhouse. “I kind of heard it.” She said someone in their group asked facetiously: “Is the building collapsing? Should we try to get out?”

A vehicle had smashed through plate glass and into the building, one floor below the bar, on the southwest corner of Connecticut Avenue and L Street NW. It came to a stop at a building column in the lobby.

The woman, the double-initialed Maureen Mathis, a law student working in D.C. for the summer, said the red vehicle, apparently a Jeep, was in the lobby. Mathis said the man who appeared to be the driver struggled with building security officers, then with police. Mathias shared her photo of the scene with the media.

“Everyone said it was a miracle that no one was hurt,” Mathis said.

With its similarities to car bombings, the crash provoked a vigorous response. Members of the FBI's Terrorism Task Force and D. C. police were there quickly. Even though the FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force was at the scene, but there was no immediate indication late Friday of a terrorist link. The motive was unclear. Police said the car had been stolen.


D.C. Police Chief Cathy L. Lanier noted the crash was indeed done deliberately. One or more containers of gasoline were in the vehicle and that gasoline had been poured on or in it. Mathis mentioned to reporters she had seen one container of gasoline removed from the red vehicle. Investigators stated flatly that the spreading of the gasoline inside the vehicle had been done "intentionally."

The entrance to the Farragut North Metro station at that corner was closed after the incident while police investigated.

The Metro stop was named after David Glasgow Farragut (July 5, 1801 – August 14, 1870), who was a flag officer of the United States Navy during the American Civil War. He was the first rear admiral, vice admiral, and admiral in the United States Navy. He is remembered in popular culture for his order at the Battle of Mobile Bay, usually paraphrased: "Damn the torpedoes, full speed ahead!" by U.S. Navy tradition.

Sunday, May 6, 2012

Omen for Obama?

That is Arthur C. Clarke on the left, on a bench at the edge of the Ellipse, feeding birds. To the right, "Dr. Victor Millson" (James McEachin) and "Dr. Heywood Floyd" (Roy Scheider) talk. A scene from the 1984 film 2010: The Year We Make Contact. Photo credit: Coseti.


The news came on Cinco de Mayo. It could be said that it might signal an omen for President Barack Obama. Nothing that sinister may be in the air, however. It might have more to do with what isn't in the ground.



On Saturday, the National Christmas Tree planted near the White House a year ago had died and was being removed.




The National Park Service says the Colorado blue spruce (Picea pungens) died of "transplant shock." It came from a tree farm in New Jersey last year and was planted on the Ellipse just south of the White House in March 2011.




The tree replaced one that had stood on the Ellipse (on the other side of the White House from Lafayette Park) since 1978 but was destroyed by high winds in February 2011.




Workers began removing the dead tree on May 5, 2012. Personally, I wonder if they forgot to water it enough. Blue spruce trees live along mountain streams, and need plenty of moist conditions. Have you seen the Ellipse lately?

It really does not look this good.



The above photograph appears to have been artificially colorized for an official government view of the Ellipse.  Recent years have shown the Ellipse in rather bad shape (see below, up through 2011).








The National Park Service says it has already identified a Colorado blue spruce to replace the tree and will plant the new National Christmas Tree in October, so it may be decorated for the holidays.

And just in time to be alive during the election!