FBI arrest suspect for possessing explosives

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SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — A San Francisco social media maven and former political consultant wanted on
suspicion of possessing explosives is in FBI custody after a three-day manhunt.
The San Francisco police caught Ryan Kelly Chamberlain II, 42, on Monday afternoon in his car near Crissy
Field, just south of the Golden Gate Bridge.
Though Chamberlain was considered armed and dangerous, FBI spokesman Peter Lee said Monday that he did
not seem to pose an immediate threat to public safety.
“Anyone who has the means, methods and access to make a bomb should be considered armed and dangerous,”
Lee said before the arrest.
A law enforcement official who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak
publicly on the matter said Chamberlain was spotted in his white car around 6:22 p.m. Monday.
The official told The Associated Press that Chamberlain was arrested without incident and is in the
custody of the FBI, where he is being processed or undergoing interrogation.
A news conference on the arrest was planned for Tuesday at 8:30 a.m. at the San Francisco Federal
Building.
Multiple agencies, including hazardous materials crews, searched Chamberlain’s apartment Saturday in San
Francisco’s Russian Hill neighborhood, blocking off the street to vehicle and pedestrian traffic for
much of the day.
Lee gave no further details about the nature of the investigation, and the affidavit and search warrant
used to enter Chamberlain’s home remained under seal.
Morgan Manos, an Uber car driver who witnessed the arrest and captured it on video, told the San
Francisco Chronicle that Chamberlain “looked pretty surprised and frantic.”
Chamberlain was wearing shorts, a sweatshirt and a beanie hat, Manos said, adding: “They took him down
hard.”
Brooke Wentz, his boss at a music rights consultancy group, said Chamberlain last contacted her Friday to
remind her to deposit his paycheck in a new bank account. The conversation was uneventful and Wentz said
she was “tremendously dumbfounded” by the news that the contractor she had hired to handle her company’s
social media accounts was wanted by the FBI.
“He’s a nice guy,” Wentz said.
She said it didn’t seem like Chamberlain was staying in his apartment. When she mailed him his paycheck
in April, he told her he would have to go to the apartment to pick it up.
She said he seemed to be under financial pressure because he told her that two friends who were leasing
his apartment left without telling him and he had to scramble to pay for two rentals.
“I wondered what kind of friends would do something like that,” Wentz said. “I tried to ask him about the
situation, but he was kind of evading my question.”
Randy Bramblett, a personal trainer, said he became friends with Chamberlain through Project Sport, a
sports marketing company. The company let Chamberlain go when it was sold in November, and he soon lost
touch with friends and stopped returning calls and messages, Bramblett said.
“We all knew that he was a very emotional guy and when he didn’t get his own way he would say, ‘Screw
you, I’m going to go do my own thing,”’ Bramblett said. “I’ve never seen him be violent, ever, but I
would definitely say that maybe emotionally and mentally he was a little unstable.”
Chamberlain had worked for years as a political consultant on Democratic campaigns, Bramblett said.
Alex Clemens, a partner of the San Francisco-based Barbary Coast Consulting, said Chamberlain is well
known in the city’s political circles and had been a fixture on the campaign trails for more than a
decade. His work in the field ended several years ago.
Clemens, who briefly hired Chamberlain for a project in 2009, said people who know Chamberlain are
stunned.
“I believe there’s been a failure in his support system. I’m sad for that,” Clemens said. “I hope he will
reach out to those who will help him.”
Chamberlain also worked as an independent contractor for the San Francisco Chronicle during the 2012 NFL
season, doing social media to boost coverage for the San Francisco 49ers Insider iPad app, the newspaper
said.
Chamberlain also taught a “Grass Roots Mobilization” course to graduate students in the public affairs
program in 2011, said Anne-Marie Devine, a spokeswoman for the University of San Francisco. Chamberlain
taught for one semester and wasn’t invited to teach another course, she said.
She said she didn’t know why he was let go because hundreds of adjunct professors come and go at the
university.

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