ARLINGTON, Va. — The Virginia man whose house in suburban Washington, D.C., blew up had a history of making unsubstantiated complaints that he was defrauded and just days before the explosion claimed on social media that his neighbors were spies.
The man is presumed dead after the Arlington residence went up in a fireball as police officers tried to serve a search warrant, authorities said Tuesday.
Police had been called to the home of James Yoo, on Monday after he allegedly shot a flare gun at the property, officials said.
The man inside did not respond to requests to come outside, prompting officers to fire irritants into the residence, police said.
The home would later explode and the man police believed was inside, Yoo, died, Arlington County police Chief Andy Penn said.
“Based on the preliminary investigation of the incident, we believe the resident of the home, James Yoo, 56, of Arlington, is the involved suspect,” Penn said.
“The suspect was inside the residence at the time of the explosion and he is presumed, at this point, to be deceased. Human remains have been located at the scene.”
The cause of the explosion is still unknown and under investigation.
Previous contact with law enforcement
Yoo was no stranger to federal authorities.
He “previously communicated with the FBI via phone calls, online tips and letters over a number of years,” said Dave Sundberg, assistant director in charge of the FBI’s Washington field office.
“I would characterize these communications as primarily complaints about alleged frauds he believed were perpetrated against him,” Sundberg added. “The nature of those communications did not lead to the FBI opening any investigations.”
Penn, the Arlington County police chief, said investigators also are aware of “concerning social media posts allegedly made by the suspect.”
In his social media writings, Yoo called himself an independent and posted ranting hashtags calling for the defunding of the FBI, CIA and the National Security Agency.
In a LinkedIn post just this past Friday, Yoo appeared to accuse his neighbors of being spies.
His LinkedIn and YouTube pages have been deleted.
Clothes and trash strewn outside
Neighbors on North Burlington Street described Yoo as a recluse who had trashed his front yard and tossed clothes out the window hours before Monday’s explosion.
“We had noticed some weird stuff. In the front lawn, trash was thrown everywhere and clothes had been thrown out the second story window, and he had never done that before,” said Tracy Mitchell, 57, who lives across the street from Yoo’s home. “The house was always locked down tight with no trespassing signs everywhere. So just seeing that debris outside was weird.”
Neighbor Elizabeth Johnston also said the state of Yoo’s property raised alarms.
“Because his house is usually very neat and clean, always perfectly mowed, and not even a leaf on the ground in fall and suddenly there was trash everywhere, clothes, things on his roof,” Johnston said. “And it was just very unusual. And before we even got the chance to make a welfare check call, there were flares going up and the police were already there.”
Before Monday’s blast, the home stood out because of the aluminum foil covering windows and its resident making no efforts to meet neighbors, according to Mitchell.
“No one did (meet him), he was too creepy. He put foil over the windows, blocked everything and never came out of the house,” she told NBC News, estimating the man had lived there for at least five years.
“Over the years he lived there, I might have seen him three or four times and always had a backpack.”
Home was part of a bitter divorce
The home was briefly on the market in 2021, real estate records showed.
James and Stephanie Yoo were in the midst of an acrimonious divorce, according to local Realtor Daniel Boris, who was retained to sell the couple’s two Northern Virginia properties, in Arlington and McLean.
But with James Yoo still living in the North Burlington Street home and unwilling to let anyone inside, no prospective buyers made a bid on the sight-unseen property, Boris said.
“He was hostile to the whole thing, he was not down with any of that,” Boris recalled on Tuesday, nothing that the couple’s other property did sell.
The pair eventually reached a settlement, allowing him to remain in the house, according to Boris.
His ex-wife did not immediately return messages seeking her comments on Tuesday afternoon.
Shattered sense of safety and security
While the cause of the explosion is still under investigation, the blast appears to have permanently shaken some neighbors.
“Makes you feel unsafe. This is a pretty quiet neighborhood usually,” Kathleen Boyle said. “I and we actually were fortunate the fire department is right there on the on the corner. So they came right away. But it does make you (feel) like, what the heck is going on, makes you feel a little unsafe because normally it’s a safe neighborhood.”
Neighbor Davin Mitchell said he was grateful no one else appears to have been injured.
“Life’s precious. You never know,” Mitchell said. “The people that live next door could not have made it out. And it could be a really bad day for them. But they made it out. So that’s why I say life is precious. If they would have been in there, they would have never survived.”
Tom Costello reported from Arlington and David K. Li from New York City.