'Lone Wolf' Worries Put U.S. on High Alert for July 4th

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Saturday, July 4, 2015
U.S. on high alert for July 4th
Celebrations marking the nation's 239th birthday are facing what some call the most serious threats since 2001

It's a Super Bowl test for America's national security.

Celebrations marking the nation's 239th birthday are facing what some call the most serious threats since 2001.

"The threat stream is very high," Los Angeles Deputy Police Chief Michael Downing said Friday. "In fact, we don't think it's been this high since 9/11."

From Los Angeles to Washington, D.C., Chicago and Boston this morning, law enforcement is fully deployed.

Authorities have cited no specific plot or threat but are concerned about ISIS and supporters possibly lurking inside the United States.

"Obviously, a lone wolf is our worst nightmare," Boston Police Commissioner William Evans said Friday, "but there's nothing to indicate we have any of that going on."

It was in Boston where the marathon bombers originally planned to target the 4th of July. They struck early, authorities say, because the bombs were ready sooner.

That attack -- and others in Tunisia and France recently -- were on the minds of tourists hitting the National Mall in Washington, as they navigate a security maze.

"You just pray that it doesn't happen," Dan Hagan of Columbia, South Carolina, said.

Added Shola Sutton of Houston: "I've seen police all over the place."

In Chicago, police are working 12-hour shifts.

Elsewhere, an extra 7,000 officers were deployed this weekend in New York City: on the ground, in the air, and on the water around Ground Zero.

But despite all the security, it's always important to say something if you see something, authorities say, because the best defense is what they call people's "sixth sense."

"If you believe something is wrong," U.S. Park Police Chief Robert MacLean said Friday, "or that the hair stands up on the back of your neck, don't feel ashamed or embarrassed to reach out to a member of law enforcement that is in the area to let them know, 'Hey, please check this.'"

That's what a 911 caller did earlier this week at the Washington Navy Yard when she thought she heard gunfire. It turned out to be a false alarm but, police say, that's exactly what they want people to do.