When police requested them to drop their weapons, they refused, resulting in an 11-hour stand-off. Wakefield Police Chief Steven Skory advised an area city council assembly that officers deployed a excessive pitch alarm is called an LRAD, which Skory describes as an 'audible alarm that basically disables somebody temporarily' throughout the stand-off, lastly bringing it to an end. A Massachusetts State Police trooper saw two cars with their hazard lights on parked on the shoulder of Interstate-95, close to the city of Wakefield, around 1:30 a.m. Jahmal Latimer also known as 'Talib Abdulla Bey' cofounded the militia group which claims to be a non-profit academic group based out of Rhode Island. Based on Skory, when the trooper asked members of the group to provide licenses for the firearms, members of the group indicated they weren't licensed or did not have copies of licenses on them. They then took up the 'sovereign angle that they did not have to adhere by our legal guidelines,' Skory said. Whereasmotion sensorhas 1,one hundred followers and a YouTube channel with 17,000 subscribers, the entire variety of members is unknown. Bodycam footage taken by a cop on the scene exhibits what led as much as the standoff.occupancy light switchbegins with a cop pointing a flashlight at the automobiles as the group's purported leader Jamhal Tavon Sanders Latimer, 29, also referred to as Jamhal Talib Abdullah Bey, approaches him. The cop questions what the group are doing and Latimer, a former U.S. Marine, says, 'We're an area militia from Rhode Island. We'll Maine. We weren't going to be make pointless stops. The cop asks if they've their licenses and all of them say 'No, we do not have licenses.' They again say no when asked if they have any forms of identification.