Cops negotiating with ‘man with bomb’

Police with automatic weapons rush into a building where a man is believed to be holding a child hostage at a lawyers office in suburban Sydney, Tuesday, Sept. 6, 2011. Australian police cordoned off a Sydney building Tuesday in a tense standoff with the man who claimed to have a bomb, smashed a window and issued threats from the lawyer's office where he holed up with his teenage daughter. (AP Photo/Rick Rycroft)

Police with automatic weapons rush into a building where a man is believed to be holding a child hostage at a lawyers office in suburban Sydney, Tuesday, Sept. 6, 2011. Australian police cordoned off a Sydney building Tuesday in a tense standoff with the man who claimed to have a bomb, smashed a window and issued threats from the lawyer's office where he holed up with his teenage daughter. (AP Photo/Rick Rycroft)

Published Sep 6, 2011

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Sydney - Australian police cordoned off a Sydney building on Tuesday in a tense standoff with a man who claimed to have a bomb, smashed a window and issued threats from a lawyer's office where he holed up with his teenage daughter.

The daughter appeared to be well, and police spent several hours trying to negotiate with the man, who claimed to have explosives in his backpack and appeared to be in his 50s, Police Assistant Commissioner Denis Clifford said.

Clifford said police knew the man's name but declined to make it public for fear of antagonising him during delicate negotiations by telephone.

Police said the man issued several demands but declined to reveal details, and said they had not yet established his motive. They evacuated the building, kept onlookers 90 metres away and were seen entering with at least one automatic weapon.

“We're working through those demands with him and we're doing the best we can to secure a peaceful resolution,” Clifford told reporters. “The fact that he's there and he's made certain threats is obviously of concern to us.”

Australian broadcasters showed footage of the man looking from a second-floor window shirtless and wearing the kind of wig worn by judges and lawyers in Australian courts. At one point he spat on the wig.

He later swung a glass bottle like a hammer to smash a plate-sized hole in the office window. He yelled through the hole and threw the bottle, then a telephone handset, which was left dangling by its cord.

He extended his hand from the broken window to make a peace sign then threw out a note. Clifford said the note was to police, but declined to comment on its contents.

Clifford said the girl, who was apparently in her early teens, had spoken to police and appeared to be doing well.

“We don't believe there's any specific threat against the girl, but obviously we'd like to secure her release,” he said. “The concern is that she's in a situation where we've got somebody with a backpack - we don't know exactly what's in that backpack so we have to assume that what he's saying is true.”

Clifford declined to comment on media reports that the man was arrested on Monday at a government building after he was involved in an incident at the state parliament in Sydney. Ten Network television news reported that the man had been charged in 1987 in connection with a protest over an Aboriginal man's death in custody.

“We're trying to reassure him that no one's here to harm him and, likewise, we hope he doesn't harm anyone else,” Clifford told reporters. “Negotiators will continue for as long as it takes to try and end this situation peacefully.”

Betty Hor said she was working at the reception desk at the lawyers' offices when the man approached Tuesday morning and asked to see someone whom Hor had never heard of. The man went upstairs briefly then returned to the reception desk and repeated his request. She repeated that she had never heard of the man he was looking for.

Hor, who spoke to reporters after evacuating the building, said that the man threw a book on her desk and told her to call the unknown man and the state attorney-general's department and “tell them I've got a bomb in my backpack.”

Hor called police as the man walked upstairs to a lawyer's office with the girl, who called him “Dad.”

Hor said he seemed frustrated and angry. She said she had never seen him before.

Five ambulances and two fire trucks were standing by at the scene, while police directed traffic away from the area as the standoff extended through the evening rush hour.

Clifford said he did not believe that the standoff had anything to do with the family court that adjoins the building.

Bitter family court cases have triggered some high-profile crimes recently in Australia, including the murder of a four-year-old girl whose father threw her more than 80 metres from a bridge in the southern city of Melbourne in 2009.

The father, Arthur Freeman, 37, was sentenced in April to life in prison after a jury rejected his plea of innocence due to mental illness.

Tuesday's standoff came a month after an extortionist broke into a Sydney home and fastened a fake bomb around the neck of a millionaire's teenage daughter. She spent 10 terrifying hours with the device strapped to her before police determined it was harmless and freed her.

Australian Paul Douglas Peters, 53, is in jail in Louisville, Kentucky, awaiting extradition next month on charges in Australia that include kidnapping and breaking and entering. - Sapa-AP

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