Man Mistaken for Manhunt Suspect
Suspect description similar to man seen in hotel parking lot, police said
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By Lauren Steussy
In an interview with NBC 7 reporter Steven Luke, a man who was mistaken for suspect
Christopher Dorner described the incident.
In the midst of a state-wide manhunt for the suspect in multiple shootings, a man
mistaken for the suspect was surrounded by police and handcuffed briefly.
Just before 10:30 a.m. Thursday, an individual at the Holiday Inn on North Harbor Drive
called police after seeing someone who matched the description of Christopher Dorner --
the former Navy reservist tied to a double homicide in Irvine on Sunday and a series of
police officer shootings earlier Thursday.
The hotel was less than a block away from where dozens of law enforcement agents were
gathering at Naval Base Point Loma at the same time.
Police located the man and told him to drop his cell phone and put his hands in the air.
Police put him in handcuffs as he told them he had just landed in San Diego less than
an hour ago.
They later learned that the man was Portland, Ore. resident Greg Pruitt, not Dorner.
In a brief press conference following the incident, an SDPD spokesperson said Pruitt
was just "in the wrong place at the wrong time."
Pruitt said he was sitting in his car in the hotel parking lot when he noticed a police
officer out of the corner of his eye with a gun, but didn’t think anything of it.
“All of a sudden I turn around and look back and see another [officer] behind a tree
with a machine gun and thought, ‘this is not good,’” he said.When he realized the officers were aiming their weapons at him, he dropped his cell
phone and held his hands above his head. Police handcuffed him and looked at the
contents in his wallet before releasing him.
“I didn’t even want to breath,” he told NBC 7 after the incident. “You have guns pointed
at you, you don’t move, you don’t breath you don’t blink you don’t ask why, you just do
what you’re told.”
Pruitt said he used to live in San Diego, and was not surprised by the police activity.
Later, police said they were expecting more calls reporting men with similar descriptions
as the suspect descriptions as the manhunt continues.
SDPD Lt. Joseph Ramos urged residents to take a deep breath and make sure the
description matches if they think they see the suspect.Source:
http://www.nbcsandiego.com/news/local/Man-Mistaken-for-Manhunt-Suspect-190284481.html#ixzz2Kc3LPC6f