Presumably now they will have some forensic evidence, (paint chips) to narrow down the make, model, and year of this white van. Interestingly, there is a ladder mounted on this van.
Profiling....
Perp familiar with basically two residential areas around D.C.
He's in home repairs/painting or such business.
Recently, a lot of "racist" news stories and editorials about a certain ethnic group commonly associated with that industry.
An already unstable man of that ethnic group gets enraged, acts out.
Conclusion:
He's an Irish Traveller!
Or maybe it's Hatfill. They'll pin something on him.
< /sarcasm>
Presumably now they will have some forensic evidence, (paint chips) to narrow down the make, model, and year of this white van. Interestingly, there is a ladder mounted on this van.
See, I was right, look what the Washington Post reported, after confirming ballistic evidence witht the latest in VA:
An employee of a nearby Howard Johnson's motel said she also saw a white van shortly before the shooting. She said it was driven by a blonde woman with a man in the passenger seat. She did not see the shooting, however. The woman, who spoke on the condition her name would not be published, has been questioned by police.
The sightings prompted a widespread search for white vans. Julie Heesey of the Fairfax County Police said officers were looking for "any white van," and urged citizens observing white vans acting erratically to report it to 911.
"I don't think anyone realized how many white vans there are out there until all of this happened," said Prince William Commonwealth's Attorney Paul B. Ebert. "They're all over the road."
Lucy Caldwell, a state police spokeswoman, said that scores of vehicles were stopped yesterday but that no one was arrested.
Many are skeptical that the white van is more than a dead end. Some investigators said they don't doubt that witnesses to yesterday's shooting saw the van, but noted that none knew whether the occupants some reported seeing one and others two had anything to do with the shooting.
Indeed, the focus on the van may be as much a reflection of the dearth of hard information as it is eyewitness reports.
"I wouldn't want the people of Virginia to focus just on white vans," Massengill said. "We don't want preconceived notions out there. But certainly . . . you have to play the hand that you're dealt. And the information that has come to us deals with white vans. So we're still interested in white vans."
Sources close to the investigation suggested that because the vans now command so much attention, people who once would have ignored them are more apt to notice them. They said the presence of a white van could be a coincidence.
Just like I said, there's so darn many of them out there, of course you're going to find one in the vicinity of the shooting, and that's all people are looking for.
"I don't think anyone realized how many white vans there are out there until all of this happened," said Prince William Commonwealth's Attorney Paul B. Ebert. "They're all over the road."
I did, since I noticed it a few months ago. The sniper has really lucked out that all this manpower is occupied with one of the most common types of vehicles on the road.