SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — The FBI has
issued a nationwide alert to law enforcement agencies about a San
Francisco social media consultant they consider armed and dangerous who
is wanted on suspicion of possessing explosives.
FBI spokesman
Peter Lee said Sunday that 42-year-old Ryan Kelly Chamberlain II was
last seen in a dark blue, hooded sweatshirt and jeans.
Multiple agencies, including hazardous materials crews, searched
Chamberlain's apartment in San Francisco's Russian Hill neighborhood on
Saturday, blocking off the street to vehicle and pedestrian traffic for
much of the day.
Lee gave no details Sunday about the nature of the investigation, but said authorities believe Chamberlain is acting alone.
"We
believe he is alone in the vehicle but we just don't know, again, where
his ties or his network is so we ask that any members of the public be
on the lookout for anyone that matches this man's description," Lee said
at a press conference outside FBI headquarters on Sunday.
His boss at a music rights consultancy group said he last contacted her Friday to remind her to deposit his paycheck at a new bank account. Brooke Wentz said the conversation was uneventful and that she was "tremendously dumbfounded" by the news that the contractor she hired to handle her company's social media accounts was wanted by the FBI.
"He's a nice guy," Wentz told The Associated Press.
Wentz
said it didn't seem like Chamberlain was staying in the apartment on
Jackson Street. She said when she mailed him his paycheck in April, he
told her he would have to go the apartment to pick it up. She said he
seemed 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? I tried to
ask him about the situation but he was kind of evading my question,"
Wentz said.
Randy Bramblett, a
personal trainer and professional athlete in San Francisco, said he
became friends with Chamberlain through Project Sport, a local 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.
He
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.
A spokeswoman for the
University of San Francisco said Chamberlain taught a "Grass Roots
Mobilization" course to graduate students in the Public Affairs program
in 2011. Anne-Marie Devine said Chamberlain taught for one semester, and
wasn't invited to teach another course. She said she didn't know why
because hundreds of adjunct professors come and go at the university.
The affidavit and search warrant used to enter Chamberlain's home remain under seal.
___ AP
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