ONE of Britain’s biggest manhunts has ended with fugitive Raoul Moat shooting himself dead during a tense armed standoff with police.
 After gradually closing the net on Mr Moat, who had been on the run  for a week after a deadly shooting rampage, armed police surrounded him  in the country village at the very epicentre of the massive manhunt.
They  cornered the 37-year-old bouncer by a riverbank late yesterday and  negotiated for six hours into the rainy night when the wanted man killed  himself.   A source close to the investigation confirmed Mr Moat  was dead.  In a search that brought in police officers from across  the kingdom, Mr Moat was finally captured in Rothbury, north of  Newcastle in northeast England.
He was wanted for shooting dead his ex-girlfriend’s new partner, and seriously injuring her plus a policeman in the Newcastle area shortly after being released from prison. In letters left for detectives he claimed to be a “killer and a maniac”, declared “war” on the police and said he would not stop killing “till I’m dead”. Police said they found the father-of-three in Rothbury at around 7pm yesterday.
“Raoul Thomas Moat was discovered by police in the vicinity of the riverbank and he was armed,” Northumbria Police said in a statement. “Expert negotiators were brought in to speak to him and spoke to him extensively for several hours. “At around 1.15am, from information available at the moment, it appears the suspect shot himself. No shots were fired by police officers.
“No officers have been injured.”
He was rushed by ambulance to Newcastle General Hospital. Mr Moat was seen being carried in on a stretcher, with a blanket covering his head. The search for Mr Moat closed in quickly yesterday. It had focused on the wild terrain around Rothbury after a car linked to him was found abandoned there.
Detectives arrested two people accused of helping him, found three of his mobile phones and released photographs of camping equipment including a tent and sleeping bag which he and accomplices are thought to have used. They said they had “recovered valuable information”.
Armed police had imposed a lockdown around Rothbury for days and within hours threw an exclusion zone around part of the village as the siege began, with those stuck inside ordered to stay in their homes. The case was dominating domestic television news channels and Britain’s tabloid newspapers.
BBC television showed a grainy, night-vision footage of the moment the stand-off ended, which featured shouting and dogs barking in the downpour.
Today’s newspapers were filled with headlines about the siege. “Got Him”, said The Sun and the Daily Express’s front pages. The search for Mr Moat brought in officers from 15 forces, including specialist snipers, and armoured all-terrain cars from Northern Ireland. A Royal Air Force plane with imaging equipment also joined the search.
Mr Moat had been serving an 18-week sentence for assault. It is the second gun rampage in quick succession in England’s most northerly counties. On June 2, taxi driver Derrick Bird killed 12 people before turning the gun on himself in Cumberland in a shooting spree that shocked the quiet, rural area.

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