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White House Fence Jumper Left Suicide Note, Documents Show


A restricted area sign is seen outside of the White House in Washington on Nov. 27, 2015. A man who jumped the White House fence on Thursday was quickly caught and now faces criminal charges.
A restricted area sign is seen outside of the White House in Washington on Nov. 27, 2015. A man who jumped the White House fence on Thursday was quickly caught and now faces criminal charges.

A man accused of jumping the White House fence while draped in an American flag left a suicide note with friends and a will with his mother, telling her she may never see him again, court documents show.

Joseph Caputo, 22, of Stamford, Connecticut, was ordered to undergo a psychiatric evaluation Friday, a day after authorities said he scaled the fence while President Barack Obama was celebrating Thanksgiving with his family, prompting a lockdown.

Caputo is charged with one count of illegal entry onto restricted grounds, which carries a maximum penalty of one year in prison. He did not enter a plea during his brief appearance Friday afternoon in District of Columbia Superior Court. A judge released him to the custody of the Secret Service for the sake of an emergency psychiatric evaluation. He is scheduled to appear in federal court Monday.

Secret Service police stand guard outside the White House after a man was caught jumping the fence Nov. 26, 2015, as President Barack Obama and his family ate Thanksgiving dinner.
Secret Service police stand guard outside the White House after a man was caught jumping the fence Nov. 26, 2015, as President Barack Obama and his family ate Thanksgiving dinner.

Caputo is the first person to be charged with scaling the White House fence since May, when the Secret Service added a second layer of steel spikes to the top of the fence in response to a series of security breaches, including an intruder who got deep inside the executive mansion last year. Other long-term security enhancements for the White House perimeter are under construction.

District of Columbia Representative Eleanor Holmes Norton said in a statement that she was “flabbergasted'' by Caputo's “remarkable jump'' and urged the Secret Service to find a way to improve security without sacrificing public access to the White House.

According to court documents, Caputo had been staying with two friends in Virginia this week, and the friends provided the Secret Service with a note in which Caputo stated his intention to die Thursday.

According to the documents, the note read, in part, “Death is a natural part of life. Rejoice for those around us who transform into the Force,'' in an apparent reference to the mythology of the “Star Wars'' movies.

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