Georgia Man Arrested After Running Toward US Capitol Building With Loaded Shotgun, Police Say

By Kimberly Hayek
Kimberly Hayek
Kimberly Hayek
Kimberly Hayek is a reporter for The Epoch Times. She covers California news and has worked as an editor and on scene at the U.S.-Mexico border during the 2018 migrant caravan crisis.
February 17, 2026Updated: February 17, 2026

U.S. Capitol Police apprehended an 18-year-old Georgia man who charged toward the Capitol Building with a loaded shotgun, officials said.

Carter Camacho, of Smyrna, Georgia, was arrested Tuesday. He allegedly parked a white Mercedes SUV on the west side of the Capitol at approximately noon. The incident unfolded without gunfire or injuries.

Capitol Police Chief Michael Sullivan said Camacho then exited the vehicle and sprinted several hundred yards toward the building, holding a loaded shotgun, before officers stopped him.

“Who knows what would have happened if we wouldn’t have officers standing here?” Sullivan said at a press conference.

Camacho was dressed in a tactical vest and gloves and had multiple rounds of ammunition. He complied with commands to drop the weapon and lie on the ground. Authorities also found a Kevlar helmet and a gas mask in the SUV.

The motive remains unknown. Congress is presently out of session. Investigators are combing through Camacho’s background. He was not previously known to law enforcement, has multiple addresses, and the vehicle was not registered in his name.

Camacho faces charges including unlawful activities, carrying a rifle without a license, possession of an unregistered firearm, as well as unregistered ammunition, according to a police release.

Sullivan requested that the public submit any videos that could be used to augment footage already held by the department.

The incident comes less than three months after a National Guard member was killed and another wounded in an ambush near the White House.

In November 2023, police detained an Atlanta man with a rifle in a park near the Capitol. And in 2022, an armed individual rammed a burning car into a Capitol barricade before fatally shooting himself.

Washington has seen a decrease in crime, which is down considerably in 2026 over the previous year, which also reported a sharp drop from 2024.

President Donald Trump issued a crime emergency declaration in the city in August 2025, mobilizing more than 2,000 National Guard troops and thousands of federal officers. Forces remain deployed citywide.

Last week, U.S. Marshal agents fatally shot a Washington man. Authorities said the Marshals responded to threats of kidnapping and harm involving a gun.

During a Trump Cabinet meeting in August 2025, a reporter from NTD, a sister outlet of The Epoch Times, described her experience of being mugged and pistol-whipped in Washington in 2023.