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Seattle Bomb Suspect in Custody

Updated at 5:38 p.m. EST

A man wrapped in duct tape alarmed people in downtown Seattle Friday morning by making threats and walking around with a pipe taped to his arm before surrendering.

The man, whose name was not released, complied with officers who rushed to the scene and voluntarily removed the suspicious device, which had a wire attached, said police spokesman Mark Jamieson.

Seattle Police say detectives from the city's bomb squad have determined that the device was fashioned to look like a pipe bomb but it was not an explosive.

The man in his 40s, dressed in black, was taken into custody for questioning.

Witnesses told CBS affiliate KIRO-TV the man made threats after getting off a bus, saying he had wires or an explosive device strapped to him.

Brian Johnson, director of a nearby men's shelter, told KING-TV that a man walked into the shelter, saying he was a vampire and needed food.

Johnson said after shelter employees refused to let him in, the man took off his jacket and showed them the suspicious device. Workers called police and told the man to leave.

Jamieson said police responded to numerous calls shortly after 8 a.m. and closed off the area around Third and James near the King County Courthouse.

Police cautiously approached the man and he cooperated. They gave him a pair of surgical scissors and had him remove the device.

"Once we started talking with him, he was compliant," Jamieson said.

A nearby apartment resident, Justin Anderson, said he saw the man walking down the street, pacing in circles, and playing with tape that held a pipe to his arm.

Anderson said the man obeyed police commands shortly before 9 a.m. and put his hands behind his head and surrendered.

"I was enjoying a leisurely morning," the 29-year-old student said. "Then something more interesting happened."

The incident closed a major downtown intersection for about two hours.

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