Man Takes Hostage in Pittsburgh, Posts Facebook Updates

September 21, 2012
By: Rachel Ramsey

The updates people choose to post on social media cover almost every part of a their day, from what they are eating for breakfast and what they’ve spotted on the way to work, to personal accomplishments and sharing of news. And now, what they’re feeling while holding a person hostage.

Police in Pittsburgh are currently negotiating with an armed man with a military background who took a hostage and has been posting Facebook (News - Alert) updates. The hostage is believed to be the owner of CW Breitsman Associates, a firm that runs employee-benefits programs and the business where the incident is taking place.

Pittsburgh police Chief Nate Harper identified the suspect as 22-year-old Klein Michael Thaxton. On his Facebook page, Thaxton says he's tired of the life he's lived and has "lost everything." He wrote on Facebook that people will "never have to woryy (sic) about me again" after he took a man hostage inside a benefits administration firm on the 16th floor of Three Gateway (News - Alert) Center.

Harper said Thaxton had been as cooperative, although he has made no demands.

"His demeanor right now is calm and he's not being irrational," said Harper, who had described the suspect as ex-military but declined to go into more detail.

Workers milled around near the building after they were ordered out shortly after 8 a.m. when employees in a nearby office called 911 to report an emergency at CW Breitsman Associates.

Image courtesy of Associated Press (News - Alert).

Police brought the suspect's mother to the office building, Harper said. Harper also stated that the woman said she didn’t know what drove her son to take a hostage.

A worker on the 16th floor described a woman running into her office yelling for someone to call 911. Kathi Dvorak, an administrative assistant at AXA Advisors, said a second woman ran in and said her office was being robbed.

Joel Kirchartz, a 28-year-old Web developer who works on the 17th floor, said he and his co-workers looked out the windows Friday morning and "a bunch of cops pulled up with all sorts of sirens going; there must have been 20 of them." He said he went downstairs to find out what was happening and by the time he got outside, police had sealed the building.

Another worker, Sarah Vereb, said she was at her desk when she was ordered to leave the building shortly after a friend called to report that she wasn't being allowed up from the lobby.

Hundreds of workers walked down the stairwell. Vereb said the exodus was orderly and "very, very quiet."

A phone message left for the building's Santa Monica, Calif.-based ownership group was not immediately returned. The building complex management office confirmed the evacuation and said it was working with police.

Thaxton’s Facebook page was overloaded with friend requests from media and those following the event. If you try to friend him, the message, “Sorry this user already has too many friend requests,” will be displayed. Thaxton's Facebook page was then deleted. It is unknown who deactivated the account or why.

After more than a five-hour standoff, Thaxton surrendered peacefully just before 2 p.m. and released the hostage. 

Stay tuned to this live blog for updates on the situation.




Edited by Rich Steeves


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