DC Sniper 10 Years Later: What Do You Remember?
"It was random, unpredictable, frightening," witnesses say. One of the snipers calls himself a "monster" in a new interview.
Today, Oct. 2, is the 10-year anniversary of what became known as the DC sniper case—a horrific chapter in local history that began in Montgomery County and riveted the nation.
It's hard to describe to those who weren't here what it was like to fear a random bullet during routine trips to the grocery store or gas station, or to drive past playgrounds and parks empty of children, runners and bike riders.
The cold calculation of the crime was unthinkable at the time.
The perpetrators, John Allen Muhammad and Lee Boyd Malvo, were regulars at the YMCA of Silver Spring in the weeks before their killing spree.
New details of their time there emerge in an account in The Atlantic magazine by Jim Ross, a public health researcher. Read Ross' article here.
The Washington Post has published a rare new interview with Malvo in which he describes himself as a "monster."
Muhammad was executed by lethal injection in November 2009. Malvo was convicted of six murders in Montgomery County and is serving a life sentence without parole.
What are your memories of the case? Have you put it behind you or does it still haunt county residents?
Tell us in comments.
Trekker954
9:10 am on Tuesday, October 2, 2012
Living in the Northern Virginia suburbs at the time, I remember counseling my teens what gas station they should go to and to sit inside the car while pumping gas. I remember parking at walmart and other stores and running full speed to get inside the doors. I remember waking up each morning and turning on the news and hearing yet another person was shot. I was a young brown hair woman living in Queens hitting the clubs during the 70s son of sam era. I remember it felt the same. Very frightening. I'm glad they caught them all.
Laura L Thornton
9:34 am on Tuesday, October 2, 2012
This happened just after I got my first car and moved to Charlottesville (from Massachusetts) for grad school. I was petrified to get gas then - we all were, because we didn't know how far south the sniper would go. I still don't like to get gas at night. It'll probably always be there in the back of my head - that I should fill up the gas tank only at well-lit places during the day, and in a place where there are plenty of people watching me.
Bill Hussein O'Stalin
9:45 am on Tuesday, October 2, 2012
I remember the government bungled the investigation and badly. Thank Chief Moose for that. I was in law enforcement at the time and remember reading the description of the look out for the dark colored Caprice occupied by black or Hispanic males right after the first shootings. That was the exact description. Somehow Chief Moose got ahold of the investigation and changed the outcome with his "white van occupied by white male(s)." You have to wonder how many additional people were murdered because of his idiotic approach to the investigation. The fact is the first description was right on the money and even after the white van idiocy, citizens were still reporting the dark colored Caprice.
liz
10:29 am on Tuesday, October 2, 2012
I lived on georgia ave and randolph rd went to montgomery college and worked at the glenmont shoppers
Greg Cohen
10:31 am on Tuesday, October 2, 2012
I was young for this, but I remember the panic at my friend's Bar Mitzvah party after one of the early shootings. I never understood why parents wanted to leave right after getting word of the shooting. Even as a 13-year-old I knew I was safer in a hotel banquet hall than outside.
Jim Ross
11:23 am on Tuesday, October 2, 2012
As I said in The Atlantic article, I insisted on not altering my behavior or my outlook. Despite my wife's warnings, I kept going to the Y, where I felt safe, even though it turned out the snipers were there for four weeks too. But I did change my behavior in one respect. Pre-sniper, my daily walks had included a stretch on Randolph Road. I changed my route to avoid the exposure of being on Randolph. That was the only thing I changed. Now, my solo walks often are only on Randolph. As I said in The Atlantic article, I still think about this, and was talking today at the Y with one of the attendants who had regular interactions with John Muhammad.
Tiffany Arnold
11:39 am on Tuesday, October 2, 2012
I was living in Illinois at the time, but a guy I used to date had aunts in Northern Virginia. They took your approach–not altering their behavior or outlook. In fact, one aunt was a regular at one of the places that had been targeted. The shootings didn't stop her from going. I'm not sure I would have done the same.
Danna Walker
11:46 am on Tuesday, October 2, 2012
One shooting occurred just a few blocks from my house at a gas station I frequented. I don't think I fully felt the effects of the whole thing until I took my children out of town for a weekend during that time and we actually felt safe - it was stark.
Richard Rice
1:12 pm on Tuesday, October 2, 2012
My late wife and I were living in Kensington, where I still reside, and we were both scared to go out anywhere. We kept the venetion blinds drawn and stayed out of the living room and bedroom as much as possible. Was very glad when he was finally captured. I do not believe in the death penalty
but hopefully he will have a great deal to think about for the rest of his life.
May God have mercy and pity on his soul!
Tamika Smith
2:09 pm on Tuesday, October 2, 2012
I was also young when this occurred and can remember the frantic. It was a difficult time to be in DC.
Tracey Reitterer
10:00 pm on Tuesday, October 2, 2012
I was living in Baltimore Country and remember everyone being afraid to go to & from the store, pump gas or stand on a corner to catch a bus. Muhammad & Malvo’s horrific actions forever shattered many people’s lives that year with their random, senseless acts of violence. Malvo claimed to the media this week he "WAS a monster". How about STILL IS & ALWAYS WILL BE a scum-sucking POS who gunned down 10 people, leaving thousands of their loved ones devastated for life. He should have been given the needle with his sub-human buddy. I'll never understand why the media keeps giving scum like this a platform to spew their bulls**t false sincerity. KEEP THE VICTIMS NAMES ALIVE & LEAVE MONSTERS LIKE THIS TO FADE AWAY INTO OBSCURITY WHERE THEY BELONG!
Bill Hussein O'Stalin
9:48 am on Wednesday, October 3, 2012
Good comment.
Tracey Reitterer
10:04 pm on Tuesday, October 2, 2012
Ironically, most people when asked, (aside from their loved ones) cannot think of one victim's name from the Sniper shootings However, Muhammad & Malvo's story is now in Criminal Justice textbooks and their names will forever go down in history as “The D.C. Snipers“. In every sense of the word, that is just WRONG.
In Memory Of Murdered Victims Everywhere
“WE SEARCH FOR TRUTH. WE SEEK JUSTICE.
THE COURTS REQUIRE IT. THE VICTIMS CRY OUT FOR IT. AND GOD DEMANDS IT!“
A quote spray painted on the wall by search
and rescue workers at the OK City Bombing site
4-19-1995.
Tracey Reitterer
10:05 pm on Tuesday, October 2, 2012
Beltway Sniper Victims:
Listed in chronological order, these are the names of the victims who were murdered or wounded in the Beltway sniper attacks.
James Martin, 55, Killed October 2, 2002, 6:04 PM Wheaton, Maryland
James Buchanan, 39, Killed October 3, 2002, 7:41 AM Rockville, Maryland
Premkumar Walekar, 54, Killed October 3, 2002, 8:12 AM Aspen Hill, Maryland
Sarah Ramos, 34, Killed October 3, 2002, 8:37 AM Silver Spring, Maryland
Lori Ann Lewis-Rivera, 25, Killed October 3, 2002, 9:58 AM Kensington, Maryland
Pascal Charlot, 72, Killed October 3, 2002, 9:20 PM Washington, D.C.
Caroline Seawell, 43, Survived October 4, 2002, 2:30 PM Fredericksburg, Virginia
Iran Brown, 13, Survived October 7, 2002, 8:09 AM Bowie, Maryland
Dean Harold Meyers, 53, Killed October 9, 2002, 8:18 PM Manassas, Virginia
Kenneth Bridges, 53, Killed October 11, 2002, 9:40 AM Fredericksburg, Virginia
Linda Franklin, 47, Killed October 14, 2002, 9:19 PM Falls Church, Virginia
Jeffrey Hopper, 37, Survived October 19, 2002, 8:00 PM Ashland, Virginia
Conrad Johnson, 35, Killed October 22, 2002, 5:55 AM Aspen Hill, Maryland
These victims have also been linked to Muhammad and Malvo:
Keenya Cook
Jerry Ray Taylor
Paul La Ruffa
Rupinder Oberoi
Muhammad Rashid
Million Woldemariam
Claudine Lee Parker
Kellie Adams
Hong Im Ballenger
Wright Williams, Jr.
Billy Gene Dillon
John Gaeta
Jae Alice Melton
6:10 pm on Sunday, October 7, 2012
My husband amd i were on our way home to falls church from fairfax on oct 14.. It was dark and we were passed by a black car easily going 20 mph faster than we. As he/she came to opening in the median they made a sharp u turn meeting with another black car. These two cars stopped short and ended nose to nose blocking the other lane.. I remember turning to my husband and saying "the sniper! Those must be fed cars, and they really can do those moves like in the movies!" we rushed home and turned on the tv... It took about 20 minutes before it took over the news channels.. In that moment I realized how dangerous life really could be....
hongfeng
10:11 pm on Tuesday, January 8, 2013
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