CANADENSIS, Pa. -- Nine days after a gunman went on a deadly ambush at a northeastern Pennsylvania state police barracks, authorities said Sunday they have recovered one of the weapons he was carrying and believe they are hot on his trail as he travels on foot through nearby rugged forests.
Investigators said they believe the suspect they describe as a self-taught survivalist had been planning a confrontation with law enforcement for months, if not years.
State police Lt. Col. George Bivens revealed a few more details about the manhunt for Eric Frein, saying trackers have discovered items he hid or abandoned in the woods -- including an AK-47 assault rifle and ammunition they believe he had been carrying while on the run.
"We are pushing him hard, he is no longer safe and I am confident that he will be apprehended," Bivens said.
Authorities did not yet know if the weapon had been used in the ambush, he said. Still, police believe Frein remains dangerous and possibly armed with a .308 rifle with a scope that police say was missing from the family home along with the AK-47.
Since the Sept. 12 shooting, there have been no confirmed sightings of or contact with Frein, who was placed on the FBI's Most Wanted list after the ambush at the Blooming Grove police barracks that killed Cpl. Bryon Dickson, 38, and critically wounded trooper Alex Douglass.
The search is focusing on a several-square-mile area on the border of Pike and Monroe counties around the village where Frein grew up, Bivens said.
"We know that Frein has prepared and planned extensively for months, and maybe years," Bivens said. "He planned his attack and his retreat."
Bivens said Frein initially had the advantage of knowing the rugged terrain around the area.
"Our tactical operations people now also know his backyard, the area he once felt safe in," Bivens said.
Heavily armed police and federal agents on Friday descended on the community of Canadensis where Frein, 31, had lived with his parents, ordering residents to stay inside their homes and preventing anyone outside the neighborhood from returning to their homes. Law enforcement officers wearing bulletproof vests and armed with rifles scoured the woods as helicopters buzzed overhead.
Police ordered the lockdown, believing Frein was close and there was the possibility of a confrontation, Bivens said. Now, they are telling residents to go about their normal lives but remain vigilant, keep their doors locked and stay out of the dense, boggy woodlands where the search is underway.
Bivens said police cannot "100 percent" guarantee the safety of area residents but said officers are doing their best to ensure Frein is not in the immediate area of where most of them live.
Although Bivens declined to discuss what police believe was Frein's motive or mindset, he said they believe Frein is focused solely on attacking police, not civilians. Police are in contact with area schools that closed Thursday and Friday because of the manhunt, and it is up to them when to reopen, Bivens said.
Asked whether it was foolish of Frein to return to the area where he lived, Bivens replied, "I don't say that it was well-planned, I say that it's been planned."
Bivens said Frein had covered perhaps 15 or 20 miles on foot since the shooting and authorities do not believe he has contacted his family. Police also have no information that he's being helped by anyone, he said.
Bivens asked residents to report any shelters or bunkers that Frein may have constructed and also asked hunters to review footage from trail cameras set up to track wildlife.
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