So the big picture is, real simply, two Capitol police officers who were part of the counter surveillance unit were dispatched to go find any other explosives that may have been left. For people to understand the timeline, the first one was found behind the RNC or the Capitol Hill Club. So that's pipe bomb number one. And they said, well, what? Let's go look for and make sure there's not another bomb out there. They sent out a series of police officers from Capitol Police, and they were sent out in pairs. One of those pairs parked at the Capitol South metro station, went directly to the same exact bush, the only bush that they could have gone to where the previous night a pipe bomber had been 77 seconds sitting on the ground. So as people watch this footage, this is what's called person of interest number one, the hooded figure, the pipe bomber, who walks up to a bush and sits there. What you're seeing on the screen right now on the top right-hand side is that bush in the daylight. You're seeing on the left-hand side a blown-up picture of it. And then in the middle or on the right-hand side, you have the actual size of the footage. The pipe bomber, the hooded figure, dropped down, eventually sat down by this bush for about 77 seconds and seems to be rummaging through a backpack and attempts to place something underneath that bush. It's not the greatest footage, but it is what it is. What happens later on is two Capitol police officers park their car, which they drove lights and sirens to get to. They park at the metro station. They walk directly to that bush and they go past it and they look under it. Then they wait a few seconds. Then they walk past it and look under it again, like, where is it? It's supposed to be there. Then they retrace their steps and end up at the exact place where the pipe bomb actually was found. And in under 12 minutes from being deployed, completely randomly in Washington, D.C., they found the bomb.