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What became known as the “Beltway Sniper Attacks,” is actually the end of a crime spree that started in February of 2002, stretched through the states of Alabama, Arizona, Florida, Georgia ...
This is part two of the article(s) about The Beltway Sniper attacks. Although not an "active shooter" event, they impacted the day to day life of people in five major cities, about ten counties ...
Over multiple attacks, the pair gunned down more than a dozen innocent civilians—people pumping gas, mowing the lawn, shopping, or reading on a park bench—leaving 10 dead and wounding others.
After two decades, what remained with me of the Beltway sniper attacks was the pit-of-the-stomach feeling, the stew of uncertainty, fear, anger and helplessness. Popular opinions articles.
David Von Drehle was brave to admit in his Oct. 9 op-ed, “How I remember the Beltway sniper killings,” that he was wrong in assuming that the snipers’ “spree of death” was the work of ...
The fear and stress felt by area pregnant women during the 2002 D.C.-region sniper attacks was acute enough to cause a 25% spike in premature births and low birth weights, according to a new study ...
After the jump, we’ve got the trailer for Sundance darling Blue Caprice, an Alexandre Moors film about the 2002 Beltway sniper attacks starring Isaiah Washington and Tequan Richmond.It’s a ...
“Blue Caprice,” a somewhat expressionistic recounting of the 2002 Beltway sniper attacks in Washington, D.C., is a movie at war with itself. On one hand, it’s a moody portrait of the ...
The Beltway sniper attacks in 2002 claimed 10 lives in the Washington, D.C., area, but "Blue Caprice," a movie based on those events that opened Friday, avoids a blood-spattered retelling. Instead ...
The story centers on an abandoned Jamaican boy (Richmond) lured to America by a dangerous father figure (Washington). Inspired by true events, Blue Caprice explores the 2002 Beltway sniper attacks ...