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Massachusetts police standoff with heavily armed men ends in 11 arrests

By Kelly Murray and Elizabeth Joseph, CNN

A standoff overnight between Massachusetts State Police and “several heavily armed men” in the woods ended Saturday morning with 11 arrests, authorities said.

The ordeal, which started during a police traffic stop, led to the shutdown of part of Interstate 95 and a shelter-in-place order for the surrounding area on a busy holiday weekend, police said.

The standoff lasted almost nine hours, but police were able to resolve the situation “through a combination of negotiation and tactical measures,” including the use of armored vehicles, Massachusetts State Police Col. Christopher Mason said at a press conference.

All arrested individuals surrendered without incident, police said. Mason said a number of firearms were seized, but he declined to say how many.

Authorities were in the process of identifying, interviewing and charging the people arrested, according to a Saturday evening update from state police.

“Several of the prisoners are refusing to provide identifying information, delaying the booking process,” MSP spokesperson David Procopio said in a statement. “We are not yet in a position to release names and other identifying information.”

Police are also in the process of seeking court authorization to search the two vehicles the individuals were traveling in for evidence.

Three people were transported to local hospitals for “examination after reporting medical issues relating to pre-existing conditions,” the latest update said. Two of those three have since been released and “transported to a barracks” while one person remains at a hospital, according the statement.

The confrontation

The situation started around 1:30 a.m., when a state trooper saw two vehicles in the breakdown lane with their hazard lights on, Mason said.

The men claimed to be “from a group that does not recognize our laws,” according to a statement from the Wakefield Police Department.

The men were wearing what Mason described as tactical vests and military style uniforms, along with body cameras, and they were carrying a mixture of long rifles and pistols. The men indicated they were traveling from Rhode Island for “training,” according to Mason.

The trooper on scene requested driver’s licenses and firearms licenses, but the individuals either said they didn’t have them, or didn’t have them in their possession, Mason said.

At some point during this interaction, a number of the individuals ran into the woods with their firearms, Mason said. Police established a perimeter, and two people were initially arrested in the woodline, one of whom was armed, according to Mason.

Massachusetts State Police said in a tweet around 5:30 a.m. that members of the group were “refusing to comply with orders to provide their information and put down their weapons.”

Mason said he was not aware of any specific demands by the group and that negotiators engaged with them to learn more.

“Through our hostage negotiation team, we are talking with the subjects — some that are in the woods, some that are in the vehicles in the breakdown lane where the original interaction occurred — and we are hopeful that we are able to resolve this peacefully with them,” Mason said during the standoff.

Of the 11 ultimately arrested, two suspects were located in the vehicles, state police said.

The group’s self-professed leader wanted it known that their ideology is not anti-government, Mason said.

“I’m not going to talk about what their forum is, and what their ideology is — I think they’ve been pretty vocal on social media about who they are and what they espouse. I’m not going to propagate that — they can define that for themselves,” Mason said.

Residents of Wakefield and Reading were urged to shelter in place during the standoff. The shelter in place has since been lifted, and the roadway is back open.

Authorities swept the two vehicles and the woods to search for more weapons.

Kristen Setera, FBI Boston spokeswoman, said the FBI is “fully engaged with our state and local partners.”

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CNN’s Lechelle Benken, Tanika Gray, Artemis Moshtaghian and Ganesh Setty contributed to this report.

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