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WASHINGTON
White House (presidential residence)

Secret Service: Suspect shot at White House gate

Gregory Korte
USA TODAY
Law enforcement officials gather near a vehicle checkpoint near an entrance to the White House on 17th Street Northwest at E Street Northwest in Washington Friday. A uniformed Secret Service officer shot a person who drew a weapon just outside the White House Friday afternoon, a U.S. law enforcement official said.

WASHINGTON — The Secret Service shot an armed man at a security checkpoint outside the White House on Friday, causing the complex to go into lockdown.

President Obama was on a golf outing at Andrews Air Force Base in Camp Springs, Md. when the shooting occurred. A White House official said no White House employees were injured, and that Obama was briefed about the situation.

The incident happened at 3:06 p.m. at a security gate at 17th Street and E Street N.W., on the west side of the White House complex where employees enter. Law enforcement agencies had originally given conflicting accounts of where the shooting happened; the Secret Service said it was outside the security perimeter.

The suspect was brandishing a weapon, and a uniformed Secret Service officer gave him "numerous verbal commands for the subject to stop and drop the firearm," said Secret Service spokesman Samuel Reed Jr. The officer shot the suspect once, and he was taken to a local hospital.

The Associated Press, quoting anonymous law enforcement officials, identified the suspect as Jesse Oliveri of Ashland, Penn.

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Reporters in the White House briefing room said they were told to shelter in place in the White House basement. Secret Service sharpshooters could be seen on the roof of the White House training their weapons in the direction of the shooting.

With temperatures in the low 70s, Pennsylvania Avenue was packed with tourists Friday afternoon. Secret Service told people to evacuate the area and pushed a safety perimeter at least another block from the White House.

Steve Snider, a tourist from Seattle, said he was on Pennsylvania Avenue taking photos of the White House when the Secret Service started screaming for everyone to clear the street.

"The first thing I knew, they were screaming for us to get back from the White House," he said. "It was scary."

Obama had left the White House shortly after 1 p.m. for a rare Friday golf outing because he's leaving for Vietnam on Saturday. His motorcade left out of a gate on the eastern end of the White House complex, away from where the shooting took place.

Vice President Biden was in the White House complex and was immediately secured after the shooting, his office said.

Tom Vanden Brook, Michael Collins and Donovan Slack contributed.

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