Posted on 10/20/2002 7:31:50 AM PDT by antivenom
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. It was 10:10 p.m., Saturday, Sept. 14. Hillandale Beer and Wine store sits in a shopping center off the New Hampshire Avenue exit, the first exit off the Capital Beltway west of Interstate 95. |
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CLICK here for larger TERRA MAP CLICK here for a MAP of all Michael Stores in the DC area. CLICK HERE |
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- 5:20 p.m. Oct. 2: Windows shot at craft store in the unincorporated Aspen Hill area of Montgomery County, Md. No one hurt. |
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- 6:04 p.m. Oct. 2: James D. Martin, 55, of Silver Spring, Md., killed in grocery store parking lot in Wheaton, Md. (Montgomery County) |
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- 8:37 a.m. Oct. 3: Sarah Ramos, 34, of Silver Spring, killed outside post office in Silver Spring. (Montgomery County) |
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- 9:58 a.m. Oct. 3: Lori Ann Lewis-Rivera, 25, of Silver Spring, MD |
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- 2:30 p.m. Friday October 4: 43-year-old woman wounded in craft store parking lot in Fredericksburg, Va. |
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- 8:09 a.m . Monday Oct 7 2002: 13-year-old boy wounded as he is dropped off at school in Bowie, Md. (Prince George's County) |
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Battlefield Sunoco |
Friday October 11 - 9:30 AM |
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Linda Franklin 47 yr old- shot 9:15 pm at 6210 Arlington - Falls Church, VA In the covered parking area of a Home Depot store |
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Latest victim 37 yr old male shot in the abdomen - Saturday night ~8:46 pm Ashland VA feeder road at a Ponderosa restaurant parking lot...shot rang out from the woods behind England Street. |
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The shooter appears to be shooting on a north-south axis, but that does not mean that the shooter is traveling along that axis.
There are many back roads and especially good ones to the west of all these areas ... and once west, a person can then travel north-south on back roads.
A person can travel around the area very quickly and largely unseen.
Using the same paths used by the Confederacy to get around Union troops.
Some of these roads are a challenge because they have twists and turns not straightened since the days of coaches. Makes for a good drive, in peacetime.
This shooter knows where the holes are.
The holes are mapped and such maps can be acquired through the following agencies, to name just a few:
From CNews online ---Sunday, September 7, 1997
Driving schools teach evasive techniques to VIPs and their chauffeurs
By KAREN SCHWARTZ -- AP Business Writer
Those who drive the world's rulers, corporate titans and celebrities are often trained to protect their clients from carjackers, kidnappers, terrorists -- and even celebrity photographers, who present a unique challenge.
On one hand, "You're a security guard and your mindset is attack, attack, attack," said Tony Scotti, who runs the Scotti School Of Protective Driving in Medford, Mass. "You don't want to treat these guys with cameras like they're the bad guys."
On the other hand, "What if one of the paparazzi isn't a paparazzi?" he asks.
A week after the car wreck that killed Princess Diana, her boyfriend, Dodi Al Fayed, and their driver, Henri Paul, investigators haven't yet determined whether responsibility rests primarily with Paul or with the paparazzi who pursued the car into a traffic tunnel that night.
Police sources have said Paul, who worked for the Al Fayed family, was drunk.
But many continue to blame the paparazzi. They are such a constant presence in the lives of the wealthy that chauffeurs trained in professional driving schools are specifically taught how to evade them.
In Scotti's three-day class, which costs $2,150, drivers learn to react if someone cuts them off, to take out other cars by ramming, and to escape from tight spots by spinning the car 180 degrees in a so-called bootlegger's turn.
In a situation with paparazzi, "I would take the car wide and swing back and forth so they cannot get alongside you," said Bob Bondurant, a former race-car driver who runs a school in Phoenix.
Those who have taken the course are amazed at reports that Paul was drunk and that he was driving at high speed.
"As a bodyguard, you would never allow whoever you're protecting to be put in danger, so you'd never drive if you're drunk and you'd never allow somebody to go that fast," said Chris Acker, a New York City police officer who received special driver training when he was with the Secret Service in 1982.
There are conflicting reports as to whether Paul had received such high-performance driver training. Some Fayed family bodyguards have taken the Scotti program, although not Paul, Scotti said.
Malta Martin, who is head of the corporate chauffeur and executive protection course at the Bondurant school, said she was once chased down the freeway by some guys who were hassling her.
"I knew enough to drive around the other vehicles, how to control the car properly," she recalls. She quickly scurried around to an exit and got off the freeway.
"Awareness is very important," she said. "If you are being pursued, then perhaps don't enter a narrow tunnel where the chances of something happening are higher."
In addition to squealing tires and ramming other cars, the courses offer a great deal of less exciting driver-training and even some classroom work.
"Statistically, the biggest threat for you and I isn't being shot by a disgruntled employee or being killed by a terrorist, it's being hurt or killed in a car accident," said Matt Croke, director of training at BSI Inc. in Summit Point, W.Va., which trains people from the State Department and military, as well as civilians.
BSI has taught more than 10,000 people in the past two decades, while Scotti has taught more than 25,000 people in the basic protective driving course, and another 400 in more advanced courses that deal with motorcades and attack recognition. More than 700 corporations, including 85 Fortune 100 companies, have sent their drivers to the course, Scotti said.
All Scotti courses end with the students evading their instructors in an imaginary scenario, like the one in which they must protect their client from the paparazzi or from a hitman armed with a paint gun.
The Bondurant school was the first to offer the course and first ran it about 25 years ago when an oil company requested special training. Over the years, more than 3,000 people have taken the course, Bondurant said.
"Mainly, students learn how to be in charge of and in control of the car and the people in the back seat," Bondurant said.
The driver "has to have a cool head, be alert and aware at all times," Bondurant said, "and you do not drink on the job."
Driving schools:
- Bob Bondurant School of High Performance Driving, Phoenix --- (800) 842-7223 --- Offers a four-day executive protection and anti-kidnapping course for $2,975.
- BSI, Inc., Summit Point, W.Va. --- (304) 725-6512 --- Offers a three-and-a-half day course for $1,395.
- International Training Inc. in West Point, Va. --- (800) 604-4484 --- Operates customized courses in Virginia and Texas.
- San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department in San Bernardino, Calif. --- (909)887-7550 --- Offers a five-day protection specialist course for $1,000.
- Scotti School Of Protective Driving, Medford, Mass. --- (800) 343-0046 --- Offers classes in Michigan, Peru and Switzerland.
A three-day protective driving course costs $2,150; a five-day executive protection class costs $1,850 and a three-day attack recognition class, which doesn't involve any driving, costs $875.
Many upper-muckety-mucks in mid-East-dom are surrounded by men who have gone through much more intensive training.
Again, they know where the holes are, the culverts and concrete drainage systems throughout our country ... where bad guys can travel yet about which, most "taxpayers" do not know anything.
Locator ^
A little tweak on the image, the arrows should be turned 180 degrees for an egress to the north. They leave the Petco, turn right up to the light by Burger King, then up to the light at Rt. 234. Once they make that left onto 234, they're 15 seconds from the ramp to I-66 east (e.g., at the top of the photo you show the I-66 exit ramp onto 234, but I propose they're on the opposite side of the road, heading onto the entrance ramp to I-66)
In any case, the hypothetical shooting location from the Petco parking lot comes from an [anonymous source] who visited the scene last week. He noted that the Sunoco gas bays/lanes are all at an angle and not perpendicular to Rt 234. When you view the Sunoco from the Petco lot you are looking straight into the gas lanes.
This is precisely the situation that exists with the Home Depot. From the school parking lot you are looking almost precisely into the lanes which are otherwise offest by several degrees from the adjacent Rt 50.
One would think that with 1,000 federal agents on the case, they would now have a good fix on how the shooter chooses positions, but apparently they do not. If so, they would have declared the entire Falls Church school parking lot as a crime scene. But they did not. Instead it was used as the main parking lot for news vans, apparently until Wednesday morning.
My source asserted that specific spot in the parking lot provides a completely unobstructed view into the Sunoco gas lanes.
Thanx
The Tarheel
The shooter is using U.S. 15, U.S. 17, U.S. 29, and U.S. 522 --- his major north-south axis is Leesburg, Warrenton, Culpeper, and Orange.
The maps do not show that some of the connecting, old back roads were, over a century ago, the main routes used, other than rail ... meaning, they take you to almost all the places you'd want to visit, while avoiding the highways.
The area is full of old coach roads that are still passible (sp?).
You could live a long time in the Quantico Marine Base before anybody there ever got a clue.
The metro-centricity of the governmentum is resisting the challenge.
To get the shooter, the law has to post every one of the intersections ... just like in the old days.
I can understand how difficult it is to accept that the high-powered L.E. budget package did not come with the guide books on how to deploy pickets to capture and reconnoiter.
What I'm saying is, that Sheridan is required --- the old playbook.
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