The chipped marble of Union Station still bears the fresh wounds. July 24th. A sweltering afternoon that curdled into something uglier than the D.C. heat. The FBI and US Park Police are hunting shadows now, ghosts left behind in the wreckage of a protest gone sideways. It wasn’t just slogans scrawled on walls; it was calculated damage, a deliberate assault on the heart of a national landmark. Over eleven thousand dollars in repairs, they say. But you can’t put a price on the feeling of vulnerability that settles over a city when its monuments are under siege.
They’re calling it “destruction of federal property and assault of federal officers,” but the official language barely scratches the surface. Witnesses describe a surge, a coordinated effort to deface and dismantle. One figure, labeled “Suspect #4” in the grainy stills the Bureau released, stands out. They physically attacked a USPP officer attempting an arrest, a clear escalation beyond mere demonstration. Details are scarce, frustratingly so. The FBI is tight-lipped, emphasizing they aren’t interested in peaceful protest, only in those who crossed the line into criminal behavior. No name. No date of birth. No known aliases. Just a phantom wrapped in the chaos of that afternoon.
The Bureau isn’t offering much in the way of physical description either – a frustrating blank slate. No height, weight, eye color, or even a hint of hair color. They’ve released nothing beyond the implication that this individual is actively avoiding detection. The silence speaks volumes. This isn’t a case of mistaken identity; it’s a calculated evasion. Someone knows something. Someone saw something. And the FBI is desperate to pry it loose.
A thousand dollars. That’s the reward being offered for information leading to the identification and conviction of this suspect. A paltry sum for the potential damage they’ve caused, but enough to maybe loosen a tongue, to shake a memory free. The FBI is building a profile from fragments, piecing together the puzzle of a face lost in the crowd. Every shadow is suspect, every anonymous figure a potential lead.
If you were near Union Station on July 24th, if you recognize anyone resembling the individual in the FBI’s released images, don’t hesitate. Don’t wait for someone else to come forward. Contact the FBI Washington Field Office immediately. The city breathes a little easier with every stone unturned. Every detail, no matter how small, could be the key to bringing this fugitive to justice.
🔠Key Facts
| Full Name | Destruction Of Federal Property And Assault Of Federal Officers |
| Charges | Unknown Suspect Washington, D.C. July 24, 2024 |
| Aliases | None known |
| Date of Birth | Unknown |
| Race / Sex | Unknown / Unknown |
| Nationality | Unknown |
| Height | Unknown |
| Weight | Unknown |
| Eyes / Hair | Unknown / Unknown |
| Scars & Marks | None reported |
| Location | Washington D.C. |
📋 Source: FBI Most Wanted — Destruction Of Federal Property And Assault Of Federal Officers
If you have information about this fugitive, contact your local FBI field office or submit a tip at tips.fbi.gov.
Related Federal Cases
- Unknown Caucasian Adult Male, Bank Robbery, Anchorage AK, 2024 · Washington
- Eric Richard Bruns, Assault on Flight Crew, Juneau AK, 2023 · Montana
- Marc Hetsler, Fear Assault, Anchorage AK, 2023 · Washington
- John Doe, Assault on Law Enforcement Officer, Washington DC, 2021 · Washington
- Jonathan Grace, Capitol Riot Assault, Colorado, 2021 · Washington

