A New Terror - Part One [1]

Published Jan 2, 2020, 8:01 AM

On October 2nd, 2002, the first shots are fired. And no one sees anything.

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Welcome to Monster DC Sniper, a production of iHeartRadio and Tenderfoot TV. The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are solely those of the podcast author or individuals participating in the podcast, and do not represent those of iHeartMedia, Tenderfoot TV, or their employees. Listener discretion is advised.

It was quite a warm morning.

I drove my son to school with some other children. I dropped them off around eight o'clock and my two year old was still in the car, so he was in.

A car seat. We were listening to children's music in the car on the radio.

I went to the gas station and I stopped to pump gas. My name's dot Caroline Namo. I'm a pediatrician. I live in Silver Spring and Maryland. It was a lovely day. It was very warm, so I opened the windows. So as I rolled the windows down a bit, I turned and I looked to the right, and.

There was a taxi and there was a gentleman who was filling his car with gas.

But I thought it was unusual because he was filling the tank from underneath the license plate.

Which I had never seen before.

I looked at him for a few seconds and he looked up at me and we made eye contacts.

I smile.

I reached to get my purse to take out my credit card, and I heard a bang, and immediately in my head I thought there was a gunshot. But at the same time, I thought, no, why would there be a gunshot. It must be some sort of electrical problem, maybe with the car, and he was doing something weird and he shouldn't have been filling it from under the license plate, how strange.

I looked up and he was walking towards my car.

It was just a few paces and he looked in the passenger side and he said, call an ambulance, and he collapsed and I was shaking, so I immediately grabbed my phone, got out of the car and call nine one one, and I was totally in shock.

By an ambula.

I don't know.

I don't think America has ever gone back to the way that it was before nine to eleven in the Anthrax attacks and the DC sniper. My name is Garrett Graff, and I'm a journalist and historian. It's really amazing looking back to the nineteen nineties today, really just how much simpler the issues on the table were.

Governments, utilities, and companies all over the world are checking their computer systems to prevent a Why two came.

Outdown Much of the country was really consumed by the impeachment of President Clinton in nineteen ninety eight. Actually, President Clinton was criticized for trying to distract from his impeachment troubles by attacking the training camps of al Qaeda. These were threats that the US was not focused that much on. As a country, the government, the National security apparatus was beginning to pay more attention to it.

We must remember it is the obligation of America to help make the world more peaceful. As far as I'm concerned, it's an obligation of a commander in chief as well to understand, in order to keep the peace, we must rebuild the military power of the United States of America.

The two thousand election at the time seemed incredibly vicious and partisan, and ultimately it was a vote of the Supreme Court that declared effectively George W. Bush the winner of Florida and thus the winner of the presidency. In many ways, Americans were beginning to lose trust in institutions as they were hit by various scandals and then of course, we didn't know either what came next.

Apparently a plane has just crashed into the World Trade Center here in New York City. It happened just a few moments ago. Apparently we have very little information available.

There weren't very many people who defaulted that morning to thinking it was terrorism at first, And I think one of the most remarkable things that you see on the morning of nine to eleven is just how innocent America truly was. President Bush continued with his morning reading to school children. Congress prepared to open for business that day after the first attacks, and even in New York City, you know, you saw people just continue their commune, thinking that they were going on to a relatively normal day at work.

I heard of throwing worked up and there was a big qualifire. You could hear the fire engines and the.

Emergency crews behind me.

I've never seen.

Any fire light in the air, and pieces of the building were flying down in tense smoke.

It's horrible. I can't even describe it.

As the morning of nine to eleven unfolded, it quickly became clear that this was a terrorist attack on not just New York City, but the wider country.

This airplane that ran into the Pentagon.

It happened within the hour.

The plane sliced through the building, it.

Came in and hit actually at about the first and second floors.

We really didn't know how wide the attack actually would go, you know. Skyscrapers were evacuated in Boston, in Chicago and Los Angeles and other cities across the country as people feared that there could be more planes still in the sky. The fear was really that there would be a second wave of attacks. That sense of fear was certainly driven by the accelerating media culture as well.

There are thousands of these terrorists in more than sixty countries. They are recruited from their own nations and neighborhoods and brought to camps in places like Afghanistan where they are trained in the tactics of terror.

Unrelenting coverage contributed to this pervasive fear about whether we were safe living our daily lives. There was the expectation really that DC would be attacked again by Al Qaeda, by a car bomb, by more planes. There was a real fear about whether this was the day that the next shoe dropped.

In the wake of nine to eleven, all of us living in the DC area were terrified, and we were all just waiting for the next horrific act of terror. I'm Tony Harris. In the fall of two thousand and two, I was working as a news anchor for Fox forty five in my hometown of Baltimore, Maryland. On the morning of October third, reports began flooding our newsroom about random shootings in Montgomery County, Maryland.

We do have five fatal shootings for no apparent reason, no robbery motive or anything like that. People who are just sort of out and about doing their normal task.

You know, you think you're out here safe, and here's this woman coming out of this apparently the post office.

And was just shot.

The people of Maryland look through their televisions to journalists like me for answers, but we didn't have them.

It is quite a mystery.

The police say they have never.

Had a crime quite like this in Montgomery County before. They are huddling together. They are trying now to figure out what's going on.

And that terrible day was only the beginning. What emerged over the following weeks was one of the most disturbing crime sprees in the history of our country. But now eighteen years later, the Supreme Court will rule on the sniper's case, and the convicted killer could one day walk free. On this season of Monster, We're going to investigate the full DC sniper story because I want to find the answers to questions that have haunted me all these years. What was the killer's motive? And should they ever be given a second chance to fully understand, We have to go back to October second, two thousand and two, an average Wednesday and suburban Maryland.

October second, two thousand and two was an unusually warm day for DC. I was working in the evening shift. You handle the routine calls. There several of us working. Everybody worked in a cubicle, nothing special really going on. It was in the early evening. The phone rang, and we don't have a secretary at night. So whoever picks up the phone, whatever's on the other end of it, you get it.

This is Patrick McNerney, a former homicite detective with Montgomery County Police in Maryland.

Was told by our communications center there had been a shooting murder, or as we call it, an one hundred in the Wheaton Glenmont District in the Shopper Sued Warehouse parking lot. So we're running lights and sirn over to the scene and took about fifteen minutes to get there. Were presented with a very large crowd in front of the Shopper Sued Warehouse.

McNerney took charge of the crime scene. He locked the area down, began interviewing witnesses and tried to figure out what just happened.

This could have and a robbery or somebody walked up to this guy and shot him. And then we still had to deal with why did it sound like a cannon going off? That was a report from the first officer who was actually sitting right across the street when the shooting took place.

The sound I heard wasn't really to immediately recognized bile as a gunshot. It was just this enormously loud percussion. I'm Alan Felson. At the time, I was working for the Montgomery County Police Department. I was a bicycle patrol officer assigned to the Wheaton District. The police station is directly across the street from the Shopper's Food warehouse we were standing today, so that's where I was then.

Felson was the first officer on the scene. He heard the shot and responded immediately, but it was already too late. The killer got away. How could a shooter pull this off in broad daylight, right next to a police station. I asked Felsen to meet me here and explain what he saw that day. So you're sitting there in your cruiser at that point, describe what happens and what you hear.

There's a business right next door here called Country Board that's been here forever. They use forklifts and pallettes. They sell mulch and garden supplies, and I mean I almost thought that one of their eighteen wheelers had been knocked over something. It was this enormously loud percussion. So I did not immediately go, wow, that sounds like a rifle. It was just this really loud thunderclap kind of sound, so obviously drew everyone's attention in the police station. People heard it inside, because that's only, you know, one hundred hundred and fifty yards away. They came to the door and looked.

Out it was that lamp.

Yes, because I was directly across from the shoppishoot warehouse, I think I already saw that. The people in front of the store, were looking straight at the parking lot. From the store, I pulled out, flipped on the emergency lights on the car. It was probably less than a minute that it took me, you know, to drive there. But as soon as I pulled in, I can see that there's a man laying face down in the parking lot. So I pulled in and I just yelled that the people are staying there, did anyone see anything? And I just got kind of no reaction. Everyone was still just staring, I think. I then yelled to them, if you heard the shots, stay here, or if you saw anything, stay here, and then drove my car up the aisle closer to where.

The victim was.

So there's a light pole here, and the victim was on the pavement. He had blood on his chest and around his mouth. He had no pulse and wasn't breathing. I didn't expose the woond right away as he was in his chest. I saw the blood by his mouth, and I just went straight into CPR And by then other people are showing up because we are only about a you know, one hundred yards from the police station, and everything kind of happens in a blur at that point, if I knew that night what we knew thirty six hours later, I would have probably positioned my car better because I basically went right in the line of fire. They could have shot me and still gotten away. Again, at this point, we didn't know it was rifle. That realization only came when I went in with one of the homicide detectives to the Shoppers food warehouse and we reviewed their security footage.

There's no audio on this surveillance, so we're just watching the quiet play of it.

This is Patrick McNerney again, the Montgomery County homicide detective in charge of the crime scene. McNerney watched the victim's last moments caught by the security camera.

And reviewing of the tape was he pulled into the parking lot in his truck, parked in a parking space, probably twenty spaces away from the store, gets out, walks, he takes five or six steps, and then he goes down and we see, you know, there's nobody standing near him. All right, So now we have to train our thinking. It's not a walk up and shoot. We're looking at a long range shot. Let's see if we can find a projectile which is truly the needle in the haystack at this point with all the residual trash, loose pebbles, stuff like that in the parking lot. Now we're even more concerned about cars riding through stuff getting caught into the treads because we don't want to miss anything. Fire rescue had already come in and determined that this person was deceased on the scene. A lot of people didn't see anything, but two or three people who were right there, right kind of close to where this person was shot. They were just walking and they heard the cannon and they saw this guy drop. They just went to hiding their cars. They had no idea what was going on. They quickly detected who was a shooting, saw this guy get down, and now they're scared for their life. My job is to to stop time as much as possible. Let's go back step by step on what happened. Where did this guy come from? Did somebody follow him in here? Was he having any issues with anybody? Did anybody hear any arguing, car horns beeping? Any reason why this event would have taken place. We found out that James Martin worked in downtown Silver Spring. Nice enough guy. People at work liked him. He's very quiet one son. He didn't live too far from where the store was. I believe it was his first time going to that store and he was just going to pick up some stuff for dinner on his way home.

Jim was a really hard worker. He worked all through high school at a general store, and everyone loved him. He always believed in fairness. He always believed in things being done kindly and justly. That's the kind of person he was. He was wonderful brother. He was just a terrific uncle to my kids.

Ola Martin Cooksley is James Martin's sister. She calls him Jim. The two of them grew up together in Missouri. They stayed close even after Jim moved to the DC area for work. It was late on October second when she got word of Jim's death.

I was almost asleep that night. I had gone to bed and I was alone, and I had just begun to drift off when the phone rang. It was my sister in law and she said that Jim is dead. I said, did you have a heart attack, you know, because our dad had passed away with a heart attack, and she said, no, he's been shot. And nobody says they saw anything, and nobody knows anything. After she told me that and we hung up, I thought maybe I was still sleeping. I thought I was dreaming, and I spent that entire night thinking that I must be dreaming. Even for the next few days, I kind of felt like it was a nightmare, and I kept wishing I would wake up. It just seemed too unbelievable. In a way, it kind of kept bit as a buffer, because I didn't just go completely bonkers the way I probably would have if I hadn't thought it was a dream. I kept thinking, I'm going to wake up. But I also had this weird, strange feeling that something had gone horribly wrong in the universe because I had just always thought it Jim and I would be old people together. It just seemed so unbelievable and so wrong, and it just felt like something had hit the world and knocked it out of line or something.

The death of Jane and Martin seemed utterly random, and investigators weren't sure what to make of it until they learned there had been another similar shooting less than an hour earlier at a Michael's craft store just miles up the Road.

About forty five minutes prior to James Martin being shot. If you go north on Georgia Avenue, probably two or three miles, you get into an area it's called Aspen Hill, about half a block off Connecticut Avenue. There's a Michael's Craft Store.

Sunny Police offer sixteenth you do la course, Hi, this is DEBI case the demander at the Michaels at Aston Hill, which you had somebody fire some sort of projectile through the window.

Of the store.

Detective Patrick McNerney also took charge of it.

Was the people in the store who actually made the call because they could tell it was a bullet that came through the window. You're sitting there and you're just proceeding normally. Then all of a sudden, bam.

Oh, there was a hole to our plateglass window. There was a loud popping sound. Whatever came through the window also went through a light here, and fortunately no one was struck.

The shot rowed high and when it entered the glass in front of the Michaels, it hit one of those lane markers, you know, versus lane one, two three, hit one of those and kind of disintegrated and later was found in a pocket on a shelf behind that.

It was only one shot so far.

You So this is the Michaels Arts and Craft Store, and this is the location of the first rifle shot. They take off, they drive away, they head up the road two miles at the most, and that's when this story takes the horrible and gruesome turn. I've got to tell you, this is the most average strip mall in America, and I visited a thousand of them growing up in Maryland. That's what this place looks like. Non descript suburbia, that's what this is. So this is the kind of community where that would have been big news, the fact that someone fired a rifle shot through the window of a Michael's. That would have been huge news, and one of the newsrooms in either Baltimore or Washington would have been asking questions, is their connection? Come on, they're less than two miles apart. You've got a fatality. There's got to be a connection.

You could really almost assume that they're connected, and ultimately they were.

McNerney went back to take another look at the Shopper's food warehousehooting from earlier.

We all kind of agreed, you know, this looks like a snipers a long shot. Nobody saw him. You heard it, But initially, there's no reason why somebody want to shoot this guy or want to shoot the other people we talked to in the parking lot who were kind of right there in that scope range. You know, why didn't he shoot them? And why him and not to her? And who knows? Our forensic team was there. I think our division captain had even come by. He usually came out and something was really kind of odd.

My name is Bernard James Forsayth. At the time of this event, I was the director of the Major Crimes Division of the Montgomery County Police Department and my rank was Captain. Now, this is six o'clock in the afternoon, one of the busiest intersections of Montgomery County. It's somewhat unusual that you would have a shooting and nobody has seen anything. I called Chief Moose, which is part of our protocol, to let him know that we had had a shooting down there.

Charles Moose was the chief of Police for Montgomery County. The two shootings so far fell under his jurisdiction.

He asked me, he said, well, what do you think it is? I said, Chief at this point, we just don't really know. We just didn't know, you know, what had occurred. Probably the worst case scenario was a random shooting with no motive. It's very hard to connect randomness, that's what it amounts to.

And with that, the bizarre events of Wednesday, October two came to an end. But this was just the beginning. The following day, on October third.

I think it's fair to say all hell broke loose.

Montgomery County.

Oh, I guess we amias okay with the travel somebody's been shot down on our back.

Lot, are they somebody is down on the ground.

Okay?

Did you see the person getting.

Out up the top of the hill and somebody yelled up the calling ambulance.

Came where they just sat.

You know, yeah, we just heard the shot.

I just briefed the chief as to what we were doing with regard to the shooting at the Shopper's food warehouse the night before, when these incidents started percolating into the office.

Yeah, I'm being down right now.

Okay, he's down on the ground.

We got a crowd of people down here.

Okay, can you ask of anybody's side.

That gun shot one of them? Had to do with a lawnmower, and they were telling me that somebody was injured, but they weren't sure. They thought maybe a blade had flown off.

Well, wasn't.

A lawnmower blew up on?

This guy's bleeding real bad?

Okay?

And is he breathing? Uh?

Yeah, barely, He's sitting up lad and everything.

It was a very tense time and a very life changing experience to feel that you walked away from something that possibly you shouldn't have. My name is Gary Lee Huss, fifty seven years old. I live in Damascus, Maryland.

Huss was working at the Fitzgerald Automol in Rockville, Maryland. The first victim of October third was shot just outside this dealership.

It's approximately, I want to say, right around seven point thirty a normal day, driving to work, and I saw my friend Sonny Buchanan. He maintained the landscaping for our dealership group.

At that location.

And I saw Sonny Buchanan with the lawnmower right on the curb. So I stopped my car and we spoke for a few minutes, just in general conversation, and I've proceeded back to my car, shut the door, and started to pull away. Is when I heard a loud bang, and I just thought it was a backfire from a car. I never even imagined that it could be anything else. Went ahead and parked my car and went in and started my day. As I sat at my desk, my staff members arrived into my office about a man bleeding on the back lot and finally went out to view because it was quite a crowd gathering from all of our employees at the dealership at that point, I was corralling my people back, not ever noticing it was my friend. I didn't even relate the two together, as I just saw him fifteen minutes prior standing upright and speaking with me. We eventually figured it was Sonny laying there on the ground and he was bleeding pretty profusely. He actually walked about fifty yards before he collapsed, quite a big distance uphill for the damage that was done to him that day. I assumed that the lawnmower disengaged in and piled him in some way. I went down to inspect the lawnmower to find the bag completely intact, the mower deck completely intact, and then flipping the mower over, the blades were all intact, so that ruled out that there was any cause from the lawnmower. The paramedics confirmed that it was a gunshot wound. We watched the paramedics try and revive Sonny and pretty much bled out on location. That day, we had somebody in the police department that was an associate and friend of ours telling us a little bit of information that there's a gunman out there, and it seemed like every hour there was another shooting. I assumed that it was a single gunman, but there was no method to the madness of what he was doing and who he was targeting at that point. Was I the target and he missed? And now I'm going to be the one that he's looking at. It changed my life that day. The two places you feel the safest are at home and at work, and one of those areas had been taken from me.

James Sunny Buchanan, the first victim on October third, died of his wound. Montgomery County police were as baffled by this shooting as they had been the evening before, but they wouldn't have much time to think about it. Half an hour later, another victim would be shot at a twelve am, only thirty two minutes after Sunny Buchanan was shot. Police learned of another shooting mail me that was Caroline Namro from the very beginning of the episode. After pulling into a gas station, she heard a loud gunshot prim Kumar Wallacher then collapsed in front of her. She immediately called nine one one.

As I was speaking to the nine one one people, I saw this police car.

And I waved over to him, and I went over to the taxi driver at mister Wallaka. He was taking a few breaths. He was not verbal at that point. The last thing he said was when he looked at the window and he said, call an ambulance, and then he collapsed. I felt such panic as a physician because I felt helpless. I had no equipment, no monitor to put the person on, no oxygen, no suction. I'm used to having everything to hand. What focused me was as I spoke to myself in my head, you know you can do this.

You know CPR, you're a doctor. I dropped to the floor.

And tried to check for a pulse, and then the policeman appeared and I said, I'll do the mathter mouth part. You do the chest compressions. I started CPR and the policeman did assist me. I remember my hands were shaking as I was doing this.

There was a lot of blood, and.

I realized that he was stopping breathing. I couldn't feel a good pulse. I think I felt for a second or two, very very thready, thin, uneven pulse, and then it went away. Unfortunately, he vomited. By that point, two ambulances appeared and they parted on Connecticut Avenue, and I remember saying to the police, then, why are they not coming. I need to suction the airway. You can't do math and mouth if the airway's block. So I didn't understand why were they not getting out. Then the ambulance people did come out of the trucks, and they did come towards us. It was all a matter of minutes. Of course, at the time, it felt extremely prolonged for everybody to arrive, but I don't think it was. Then the ambulance people tried to intubate at the scene and put mister Wilker on a gurney, and then I just remember a lot of police presence and everything happened very first after that, and my husband had arrived and he'd been allowed to take my son, my two year old away, So I was.

Very disturbed the whole day.

It's horrific that somebody could murder somebody.

Just awful, what a waste. And I was there.

You know, you start to question, well, why was it him not me? Normally I part the car and I immediately get out of the car. But that day I paused for a few seconds because he was filling his gas tank from where the license plate was, and that had slowed me down, and that's why I didn't get out.

Of the car.

So that few seconds of delay made a difference to my life. I was the slightly blurrier object behind my windshield.

The clearer shot was to the guy that was out of the car.

But if I hadn't been nosy and looked over at him, Wow was he doing filling the car?

That's really weird. Why is his gas tank there?

I would have got out, you know, maybe it would have been a better shot to me so there, But you know, for the grace of God go I. That's a very shocking thought to be faced with your own mortality.

Montgomery County police were starting to realize they had something big on their hands. At this gas station where prim Kamar Wallaker was shot, law enforcement held the first of many press conferences.

We are presently making all of the notifications to the immediate family members. Our investigators are making that personal contact to all of those individuals.

This is Montgomery County Police Chief Charles Moose. Since these shootings took place in his jurisdiction, Chief Moose was in charge of the investigation.

We have a number of different resources that have been deployed. Clearly, we have a number of police officers on the street in uniform, in playing clothes. They are numerous traffic stops, numerous arrests occurring throughout the county. We're also putting together the last technical pieces of the hotline. We anticipate in the next couple hours coming back to you with that number. Would ask you as the media to please be very diligent in helping us get that number out, and I would anticipate at that same time that we would connect that hotline.

To a reward.

The FBI, atf US Marshals, and the Secret Service all involved in this investigation bringing resources to the table, bringing investigators, bringing experience to this situation that is very bizarre to all of us.

The fear of these attacks, the fear spawned by these attacks, really rippled across the capital region and up and down the East Coast, whether you were an ordinary office worker, a school child, or a law enforcement official.

This is journalist and historian Garrick Graff.

In some ways, the fear was truly crippling at the time because what you had was, you know, we had been told for a year, since nine eleven, that more attacks were coming. We didn't know when, we didn't know what form they were going to take, and we didn't know how long the attacks would go on. Federal law enforcement and the intelligence agencies had been already operating at a crushing tempo in the wake of nine to eleven, and then along comes the DC Stiper and all of the country's worst fears are realized. The idea that these were ongoing attacks with very little information, carried out for no discernible purpose. This was, in some ways the worst case scenario for what we had all feared was coming after nine to eleven, as the Stiper attacks continued and spread, This was something that just altered the fabric of life in the Capitol. It was scary to be outside. It was scary to be on your daily commute. It was scary to go to the grocery store or fill up your car with gas. And then as the DC sniper case unfolded, that terror only grew.

Even at my station in Baltimore. The paranoia and confusion was everywhere. No one knew when or where the snipers would strike next. It was a terrible feeling, one that stuck with us for weeks, and it's a feeling I'll never forget. Just when you thought it might be over, news would come in about another shooting. After law enforcement held their first press conference that day, on October third, the attacks continued. Just twenty five minutes after prim Kumar Wallaker was killed at a mobile gas station, another unsuspecting victim was shot only two miles away.

We do see that there is a bullet hole just above the bench on the large window there. The woman, as we understand, was shot in the face, apparently as she was just sitting there.

There is a ruthless person on the loose.

What I nerves this community the most is the randomness of the murders, ordinary people doing ordinary things.

All that the victims appeared to have had in common Each was shot to death by a single bullet.

Be careful, these guys are using weapons that are going to go right straight through our bulletproof ess.

The massive man on continues, but police admit they don't know who are, what they're dealing with, or what their motive might be.

The White.

From iHeartRadio and Tenderfoot TV. This is Monster DC Sniper this season on Monster DC Sniper.

Police have had little to go on. Only one witness's description of two people in a white truck speeding away from one murders e.

And he described the vehicle and he said guy was leaning out like on the driver's side mirror.

That was the first lead where someone had actually seen somebody.

More about that calling card.

It was left at the scene of the most recent shooting.

It was a card from a fortune telling deck that's known as the death card, with a note written on it, dear policeman, I am God.

But they find out soon that the information they got was bad.

FBI in Washington, DC did a more thorough search.

And that's when we got a hit on a fingerprint.

We just heard it on the local AM radio station. The snipers are in the rest area in Myersville, send everybody you got.

If you understood the case, it was basically just two outcomes, death are life. That was it.

His sentencing is not constitutionally acceptable.

He has to be sentenced in a way that gives a jury the option.

To go lower than that.

He was a psychopathic, cold blooded killer that can never walk the street again.

I do believe he was brainwashed, for lack of better term, I get the feeling he agrees he has to pay a price, but I don't know if he thinks he's already paid it or not. I don't know the answer to that, but I'd like to ask him.

Monster DC Sniper is a fifteen episode podcast hosted by Tony Harris and produced by iHeartRadio and Tenderfoot TV. Matt Frederick and Alex Williams are executive producers on behalf of iHeartRadio, alongside producers Trevor Young, Ben Keebrick, and Josh Thain. Payne Lindsay and Donald Albright are executive producers on behalf of Tenderfoot TV alongside producers Meredith Stedman and Christina Dana. Original music is by Makeup and Vanity Set. If you haven't already, be sure to check out the first two seasons, Atlanta Monster and Monster the Zodiac Killer. If you have questions or comments, email us at monster at iHeartMedia dot com, or you can call us at one one eight three three two eight five six six six seven. Thanks for listening.

Monster: DC Sniper

From iHeartPodcasts and TenderfootTV, ‘Monster: DC Sniper’ reinvestigates the beltway sniper attacks 
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