News

Reichenbaugh wrote a book, "In Pursuit: The Hunt for the Beltway Snipers," about how local, state and federal law enforcement agencies worked together to find Muhammad and Malvo, who killed more ...
Jeffrey Hopper was shot by the Beltway snipers, who terrorized residents from Maryland to Washington and Virginia in a three-week rampage that left 10 people dead and three wounded, including ...
Beltway Snipers: Law Enforcement Officers Remember Terror, Pressure to Find Them The car, gun and other evidence the police recovered from the snipers is at the National Law Enforcement Museum in ...
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 youngest survivor of the Beltway sniper shootings that terrorized the D.C. region 20 years ago reflected on how the shooting impacted his life. News4’s Darcy Spencer spoke with him.
If today’s technology had been around 20 years ago, the Beltway snipers likely would have been caught sooner.
Malvo and his mentor, John Muhammad, shot people during a three-week period in 2002 with a sniper rifle in what is now known as the Beltway sniper attacks.
It’s been twenty years since the Washington area ground to a halt, as two snipers injured and killed multiple people, who were simply going about their lives.
HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) - A former Honolulu police officer who was better known as the man who helped end a string of deadly sniper attacks in Washington, D.C. and Maryland has died. Charles ...
Charles Moose, the former Montgomery County Police Chief who lead the massive investigation into the Beltway Sniper attacks that terrorized the Washington, D.C. region in 2002, died Thursday, the ...