Posted on 10/15/2002 3:27:20 AM PDT by kattracks
Capitol Hill (CNSNews.com) - Much attention has been focused on the "rifle" used to shoot ten people, killing eight of them, in the Washington, D.C., area. But what if the so-called "Beltway Sniper" isn't using a rifle?
"We're willing, at this point, and able to say that from a 90-percent accuracy, we're dealing with a high-speed-velocity round," Montgomery County Police Chief Charles Moose said Oct. 4, the morning after four people were murdered in the same day.
"We're dealing with someone shooting from a distance," he continued, "someone using a high-velocity round, 90 percent sure that it is a .223 round from a rifle."
Agents with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (ATF) later displayed four "samples" of various rifles chambered for .223 ammunition, the round police say has been used in each of the shootings.
Investigators also displayed a number of carrying cases commonly used to transport the types of rifles shown to the media. Authorities have encouraged citizens to phone their toll-free tip line if they see anyone in the area of one of the shootings with a rifle, or with one of the carrying cases.
The public has also been encouraged to contact police about anyone who owns a .223 rifle, who has been acting in a suspicious or unusual manner since the murders began Oct.2.
But Neal Knox - former president of the National Rifle Association's Institute for Legislative Action, who now heads the Firearms Coalition - warned Monday that authorities may be overlooking another possible weapon in the murders - a handgun chambered in the .223 or similar caliber.
Hand-fired weapons capable of firing the .223 or similar rounds include three that provide for the mounting of a telescopic sight, which would improve accuracy at the 100 to 150-yard range from which investigators believe the sniper is firing.
One of the weapons is the Kimber Predator, a modified version of Kimber's M-85 bolt-action rifle. Another is the Remington "Fireball," a bolt-action handgun chambered for the .221 caliber, which was first produced in the mid-1960s. The third is the Thompson Contender, a single shot, "break open" style gun, which is "capable of serious long range shooting," according to the company's website.
The killer has fired a single shot in each of the attacks.
"Because it's smaller, either a Contender or Fireball would be ideal for sniping from a car if you had a sandbag between the butt and the window frame," Knox explained.
Glenn Beach, an ATF firearms examiner, acknowledged the existence of handguns that fire .223 rounds, but claimed they are rarely used, "especially when you're dealing with long ranges, for accuracy's sake."
Dennis Jackson, an advisor to Armed Females of America, disagreed. He told CNSNews.com Monday that it is "very realistic" to consider the possibility that the shooter could be using such a firearm.
"They are accurate for a handgun," said Jackson, who has fired the Thompson Contender. "People need to think outside the box."
Knox estimated the accuracy of the .223 or similar caliber handguns at "about one inch at 100 yards."
"I've shot Fireballs that were capable of 1/4-inch, center-to-center, five shots at 100 yards," he added. "That's as good as the very best specially modified AR-15 [semi-automatic rifles], and as good as many bench rifles."
Handguns chambered for .223 are typically less than 18 inches in total length and approximately 6 inches tall. They could be easily concealed in a nylon or hard sided briefcase, or a padded bag made especially for handgun storage and carrying.
After the eighth murder occurred near Fredericksburg, VA, Friday, authorities closed several interstate highways and other major arteries to search white vans fitting the description of one seen leaving the location of the shooting. Observers noted that police seemed to be quickly looking inside the vehicles for a rifle or storage container similar to the ones shown to the media.
"They're looking for a needle in a haystack because [the .223] is such a common round," Jackson noted. "This is giving them another alternative."
Chief Moose refused to answer questions Monday about the specific type of weapon the sniper might be using, saying, "We didn't come out here to speculate."
Police have been tight-lipped about details of the investigation since media outlets reported the discovery of a tarot card inscribed with the words, "Mr. Policeman, I am God," at one of the crime scenes. Critics say authorities are too concerned with building a criminal case, and that releasing more details could help friends, family members or coworkers of the killer identify him as a potential suspect.
E-mail a news tip to Jeff Johnson.
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The "Beltway Sniper" is a Chechan who is here illegaly brought in for this killing spree. He's being sheltered and escorted by Arab sympathizers/members of Al Qaeda. He's using a smuggled weapon that he used in combat with the Russians in Chechnia.
Last night's shooting lends some support to the theory that this guy isn't using a semi-auto. I can't imagine him running around in the dark trying to locate a spent brass that went flying off into the night. (Though, of course, he could have a brass-catcher stuck to the side of a semi-auto.)
As to the theory that a pistol could have been used, that's a distinct possibility. It wouldn't be hard to make these shots with a scoped Contender, or a similar weapon, resting across one's arm in a car window. It would certainly be less ackward that trying to manuever a rifle out the window for the shot as well as less noticable to witnesses.
The shorter barrel makes it a little more difficult to work up a good load. You won't get the highest velocities the cartridge is capable of. I forget the rate of twist, but I used 50gr highly frangible bullets. But I don't think this shooter is using FMJ's. The kills/wounded ratio is too high, or he's putting the bullets where he wants them.
No. Clear reports were heard and described by several witnesses in multiple attacks.
1. Single round per attack
a. Could be fire discipline, esp. if this is a trained attacker or terrorist
b. Could mean sniper is using a turnbolt, either long arm or something like a Contender
c. The brass picked up with the Tarot card was the only one reported. Was it a plant?
2. If the sniper is using a semiauto, he has to be using a brass catcher, and the brass discovered with the Tarot card is his, that got away somehow? If he's using a turnbolt weapon, the brass is probably a plant from another type weapon in .223 cal. If he's using a semiauto with brass catcher, then he is exercising fire discipline, and the brass may be a plant anyway.
3. If the sniper is planting misleading evidence, then confusion is a major goal, either to help him evade/escape, or because he's a terrorist.
4. If the sniper is using a semiauto like a CAR-15, then he is exercising fire discipline. Does that make him a trained terrorist?
5. Either way, he's a fanatic, taking huge chances.
That's as far as I want to go right now.
By the way, using two vehicles doesn't make sense. Why a two-man team? They couldn't communicate without being compromised by NSA, law enforcement, or someone else.
What was the selection of weapons in that news conference based on? Only four weapons? There are a zillion long guns that shoot .223.
Sounds like they're down to Armalite designs based on what they showed at the press shindig -- anybody know anything more about that?
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