Um, I hope you guys are keeping like tune with the mafia series that we're like broadcasting every Thursday.
Uh, also follow Fed it on Instagram is at FedEit uh dot 1811.
Okay.
And I'll be like reading your requests and everything there.
Actually, a big part of the reason why we're doing this one is because you guys have been asking for the DC sniper for quite a bit of time for a long time.
Um, I like I said before, what kind of held us back was like crappy documentaries, not want to hit with c get copyright, all this other stuff.
But I think I found one that won't that's uh good and also not gonna hit us with copyrights, but um, real quick announcements because I see some of you guys are asking some things in the chat right now.
Um 9-11, yes, we're gonna cover 9-11 with Ryan Dawson on May 5th, marked your guys' calendars.
What I'll probably do is I'll probably broadcast it on this channel and Fresh of Fit at the same time.
Because as you guys know, I did extensive videos on 9-11.
I covered both the official story with um, you know, obviously Bin Laden, Al Qaeda, how the FBI solved the case, etc.
And then I also did an unofficial version where we covered all the conspiracy theories of it being controlled demolition, inside job, et cetera.
But there's an angle that Ryan Dawson uh and us are going to discuss that no one discusses, which concerns them boys, and also um a name that rhymes with Loudie Berbia.
Y'all know what I'm saying.
Loudie uh Larabia, whatever.
Okay.
So we're gonna be covering that angle as well.
Um, which I saw in a lot of these 9-11 truther videos.
No one ever covers these other forces that were involved in allegedly involved in the 9-11 stuff.
Um, we're gonna be bringing out you know, FBI documents, declassified documents from uh NSA CIA, et cetera.
And especially the FBI docs are gonna be the most important through foyas.
So this isn't necessarily just gonna be uh, you know, a tinfoil hat fest.
It's gonna be very factually based, okay, guys.
Um, so it's gonna be extensive.
I predict that brought that's gonna be at least a two to three hour broadcast with uh with Dawson.
Uh we'll start it on YouTube, and then we're definitely gonna have to go over to uh Rumble once we start talking about um them boys, if you know what I'm saying.
Um then as far as uh the mafia stuff, we've covered so far.
The first episode was the hierarchy and you know, terms, organization, etc.
Gives you like a one-on-one on how the mafia is in the United States, and we also went over the history of uh Sicily then coming on over to the United States and the prohibition area, etc.
Then we went into the Gambino family, then we did the Lucchese family.
Next, we're probably gonna do the Bananos.
And the reason why I'm pushing uh I know you guys have been wanting the Columbus for a while.
Reason why I'm pushing that back is because we're actually having Michael Francis on the show.
I think May 17th is what we're gonna have him on.
So I want to kind of have uh the Columbo Crime Family done around the time that we interview him.
Uh also so I can have the most accurate stuff because as you guys know, Michael Francis was a capo for the uh Columbo Crime family back in the 70s and 80s, uh, way back in the day.
Um, and then what other announcements?
I'm trying to think, Angie, we got uh I'm just very excited for Michael Francis.
Um, I'm trying to watch like most of his content, so we won't ask him like the same questions that everyone has asked him already.
So we're gonna do that.
We're gonna we're gonna like keep it real.
Yes, so off.
So yeah, that's happening.
I'm very excited.
Uh, do you mention that Ryan does something as well?
Yes, yes, you did.
Okay, so yeah, those are like the main announcements that we have for you guys.
Yeah, all right.
So I'll hit some of these chats before we get into it.
We already got 1100 plus you guys in here.
So do me a favor, like the video, subscribe to the channel.
Oh, also Donna Market, you guys, we just hit 150k.
Dumb.
All right, we just hit 150,000.
So on this channel, so I really appreciate that.
Uh, you know, like I said, this channel, guys, surprisingly does take a good amount of my time uh because researching these cases takes a long time, right?
A lot of times we're doing cases um of things that aren't necessarily fair federal jurisdiction, especially the serial killer cases, those take a lot of time.
Uh, because you know, serial killers a lot of times are state cases, guys.
The feds don't really investigate serial murders.
We might come in and assist, but they don't necessarily the lead agency on it nine out of ten times is gonna be the state.
Why?
Because the state focuses on murders.
Um, but yeah, it's been great.
You know, um, I might bump it up where we might do three videos a week for y'all.
Maybe I do some reactions to like shootings.
I noticed that you guys really enjoy it when we do the tactical breakdowns, especially with these school, um, these mass shooter cases that I've been doing where we look at the body cam footage and analyze it.
So I might do something similar to that.
Um, but yeah, we'll we'll see what we can do here.
As you guys know, Fresh of Fit takes priority.
Um, but this channel definitely is fun as well.
It just takes a lot of time uh for only two videos a week.
Uh Jose Mendido goes, shout out Myron, all the way from Waco, Texas.
Hope you cover the Waco speech soon.
Yes, we are.
Umaco is going to be covered.
Um, me and Angie literally just finished um watching the uh the Netflix series on it.
And I called it back then when it was like number three in the United States.
I was like, watch wait Waco, they're gonna request it.
Yeah, and uh, you know, Lombohold guys have been.
Yeah, you guys are requesting it.
So don't worry, we're definitely gonna cover uh the Waco siege.
Absolutely.
That's coming.
Uh hi, Lord Myron.
Will you cover Jennifer Dulo's CT case?
Also, what are your thoughts on a sales job?
Uh, sales is a good way to get your foot in the door and learn how to be um personable and speak to people, and it'll help you out with girls as well.
Um, and Jennifer Dulo's case CT case.
I never heard of it, but we can write that down.
Uh Kevin's Garage, update on that JFK video.
Good question, my friend.
Um, we're gonna cover John F. Kennedy after we cover 9-11 with Ryan Dawson.
Um, a lot of you guys are younger, and some of you guys may not even be familiar with uh the John F. Kennedy situation, but that definitely uh is a very complex situation.
That's probably gonna take two to three hours to explain because there was a bunch of different hands involved in him being assassinated.
As you guys know, late last year, I think they declassified another section of the JFK file, and it's pretty much established now at this point that the CIA was involved in his death.
Uh Tucker Carlson talked about this uh a couple months back.
I think back it was November because he was he was he was assassinated on November 22nd, I want to say like 1963.
Um so uh they declassified the documents now to a degree, and you can see that the CIA was involved.
We're gonna talk about that with Ryan Dawson as well.
But I mean, if I'm gonna break it down in a certain number of components, uh number one, organized crime was involved because Sir John F. Kennedy definitely was going super hard on Lakosa Nostra back then.
And we talked about that a little bit in the first episode of uh the mafia.
Um it was um them boys, and then also it was uh intelligence agencies that were involved in John F. Kennedy's assassination.
So we're definitely gonna talk about that as well.
That will also probably have to be partly done on Rumble because them boys, as you guys know.
Uh Camp Two Times, Myron.
Have you seen the latest Jubilee episode Cos versus X criminals?
I know they're going crazy in the chat, right?
Uh debate about if cops should be disarmed, if is policing necessary, is crime justified, etc.
No, I did not see it.
Uh Ryoko, been watching Fed of 1811 recently.
I can't get enough uh of it.
I'm mad I didn't start sooner, but I'm glad that I have a lot to watch now.
Don Damarco, we got you, my friend.
Don't worry about us.
So just asked uh if we can get a playlist.
Uh Myron actually made a playlist for the mafia series, you guys.
So you can guy, you can go check it out.
Yes, I definitely made one for y'all.
It's uh I made a couple playlists for you guys, um, so you guys can easily find the the content.
Here, I'll show you guys real fast what it looks like.
Can you pull up the next chef for me?
Uh Angie, please.
Yeah, sure.
Uh this is what it looks like, by the way, guys.
Um, so you come on down, right?
Here's the channel, right?
And you come down, most popular videos, and all most recent videos, right?
All of them are here.
Then I got the Sunday videos that we do, which are always live streams, and I got the um Thursday videos, which are always pre-recorded, which we've been doing, the Gambino family, etc.
Then I got a whole place for y'all for infamous serial killers, Jeffrey Dahmer, John Wayne Gacy, Ted Bundy, uh, this the um zodiac, which actually is one of my favorite ones that I covered.
This one was four plus hours long.
Um, the Night Stalker, the Green River Killer, um, Railroad Killer, the Unabomber, the Toy Box Killer, the BTK.
Yo, a lot of content here, man.
Ed Gyne.
Like, uh, we did all of them.
And then here, if you guys come on down, I just created this playlist, I think yesterday.
Um, here's the Italian Mafia, right?
It starts with obviously the origins, then we got the Gambino Crime family with John Gotti, etc., then the Lucesi's.
Then we got the 9-11 situation, right?
We go all the way back to 1993 with the World Trade Center bombing, then uh how 9-11 happened and the FBI solved it.
Then we talk about Osama Biladen, how the CIA found him.
And then I had another video on how the SEAL team six killed him, but they took that down on YouTube, which is lame.
I'll find a way to re-upload that for y'all.
Don't worry.
Um, because I retried re-uploading and they were like, no, no, they gave me the big uh nope.
And then we got then we go into the conspiracy theories.
I did a three-part on the documentary, the new Pearl Harbor, um, which is a five-hour documentary, and I reacted to and broke it down with y'all.
And then uh the last part of this is gonna be the Ryan Dawson interview, um, which we're gonna cover the angles that everyone else is too scared to cover concerning them boys and Laudy Rabia, if y'all know what I'm saying.
Uh, and then yeah, man, and then obviously all our other channels.
So go ahead, make sure to subscribe to Fresh Prince CEO, Fresh Fit Clips, and obviously Fresh and Fit.
Um, but yeah, guys, uh, what else here do I have?
Oh, going back to the chats, my bad.
Yeah.
So uh so we got here various layers, big bossing.
Have a great night, sir.
Keep up the great work.
I appreciate that, man.
Uh G Fitness goes, when will you uh be breaking down Aaron Hernandez?
That's also on the list, don't worry.
Y'all been asking for that one for a while too.
Yeah, we're gonna do that one as well.
Um, what else?
Uh we got Jared Troy, shout out to you, Choi.
He goes, Myra, do you believe that if what the heck?
Okay.
Uh uh.
All right.
He's trolling.
We'll go on to the next one.
Okay.
Honey Bones goes.
Slam, brother.
This is to help show my appreciation for you helping me because uh become the best wife I can be, alhamdulillah.
God bless you.
And the FNF crew.
Thank you so much.
I appreciate that.
Shout out to you and uh your marriage.
Uh Shukanja Zilan.
Fresh the handsome lawnmower.
Uh five more lawns.
Let's go.
Okay, I got you, bro.
As Fresh said he identifies the lawnmower to troll all these people that are saying that they identify as a woman.
Uh Michael Mistro, appreciate that.
Super sticker.
And then what else we got here?
Why Angie sounds like she's out of breath?
Lose.
Because she'll be going to the gym, guys.
That's why she's out of shape.
You have anything you want to tell the people?
No.
I'm not out of shape.
But um, yes, I've been going to the gym and I'm very like happy with my, you know, what do you say?
Like, I I don't know how to say it, but anyways.
Yeah.
I'm not, I don't sound like I'm out of breath.
What the hell?
That's crazy.
Anyways.
Mara, what do you why do you have that face?
Because every time I bring it to the airport, you're like, try to keep up and you can't keep up.
Because I'm I gotta carry her bags for her, guys.
If y'all want to know the truth, because she's so slow and she'd be getting tired.
Like, well, I'm like, man, come on, man.
And I just like take her shit.
We'll just we'll just go.
Because I'm carrying like half my weight.
That's crazy.
Uh bruh.
I have to cover your backs too.
So well, yeah, you that makes it even worse when you carry them.
Because then we're you we go slow.
Then I just take yours and I say, Let's go.
Come on.
So, yeah, Angie, she's going to gym, though.
She's trying to get in better shape.
Michael Meestro, dollar.
Thank you so much.
Uh, you didn't read this one.
Oh, I think go back to it then.
And I guess thank you so much for the support, like I said before.
You don't have to donate a dollar to the channel.
Just like the video, subscribe to the channel.
That's all I asked.
Let's get this channel up to 200k.
When are you gonna do Griselda Blanco, aka Godmother?
Okay, that's uh oh man.
Okay.
That again in itself, okay.
So Griselda Blanco, they're talking this.
Now we're getting into Miami uh Colombian drug trafficking.
That's gonna have to be a series by itself, too, guys.
Uh cocaine cowboys and getting into that whole thing.
If I'm gonna cover that, that's gonna be a series as well.
That's gonna be a three to five part series easily if we're gonna cover the whole cocaine wave here in the Miami, which I actually I'd be happy to do that.
That um when it comes to uh drug smuggling, that is one of my uh uh specialties, so I can definitely cover that.
But that's gonna be a bunch of series, but good suggestion.
Uh, we'll write that one down.
Michael Meestro, thank you so much.
Okay.
What else do we got here?
And we already got 1600 of you guys in here, by the way.
Like the video, subscribe to the channel.
Love the coverage of these syndicates.
Salute.
Thank you.
I mean, Daniel, I appreciate that.
Uh, whenever you guys say Tradcon, my brain immediately goes to Decepticon.
How are you thinking about Megatron?
No, it means traditional conservative.
Okay, Michael, make sure it's uh thank you so much, Michael.
Uh 716 locks, can you do the bike path grapest upstate New York?
Never heard of that.
That's the first time I've seen that request.
Uh, shout out to the IRS.
Your breakdowns on these cases are legendary, keep with the great work.
W Lord Gaines, W Angie for being a great helpmate.
Yeah, shout out to Angie helping out.
Uh Secret Vlogger, 19 Born in America before in high school diploma.
Can I still become a special agent in the future?
Uh so I'll tell you this.
So you're going if you're gonna be born in America before in high school diploma, can I still yeah, you're fine.
But you're gonna have to if you have dual citizenship, you're gonna have to renounce your other citizenship.
Um, and you're probably gonna have I think you uh one of the prerequisites for a lot of agencies is you've had to have lived in the United States for between one to five years consecutively, and you haven't you can't have lived abroad.
So I think you'll be okay.
But uh, but just make sure and or be prepared that if you want to get any government service, especially something where you have a clearance, you will have to renounce any other citizenships you hold.
That's great.
I didn't know that.
Yeah, yeah.
Uh Nova T. Mary, I'm a former prosecutor and currently a defense attorney in Houston.
Watch Fedor Religiously, would love to work with you, brother.
Anyway, uh I can apply to contribute to the team.
Hmm, interesting.
Uh, you know what?
DM Angie right now, fed it.1811, and uh I'll ask you some questions and see what what we could do here.
Um, I don't know what kind of if you if you say prosecutor, I don't know if you mean federal state.
I'm gonna assume you're probably an ADA assistant district attorney.
Um, but if anyone's an A USA, let me know.
I'd be happy to work with a A USA on this channel.
Uh past the Foleys goes, them boys.
Yeah, bro.
You already know them boys.
We can't even mention them on YouTube.
Uh, does it BAU from criminal minds really exist?
I've never seen a show, so I don't know.
What is a BAU?
Do you know?
I'm not I'm not sure.
But uh I will tell you guys a lot of these um crime TV shows are somewhat uh they have a lot of fictional fiction in them.
Uh when y'all going to do men in black, not the movie.
Probably not.
What's that?
I don't know what he means by that.
Probably some like CIA crap.
Uh what else?
Uh joint CEO network, need more money to join to join yours.
LOL.
Don't worry about it, guys.
And yeah, I gotta advertise uh Myron Mindset more.
Um, I've just been really tied up.
So I want to launch it uh fully on uh probably after Fresh finishes his stuff.
What else do we got?
Okay, that's it.
We're caught up cool.
Yes, all right, guys.
So for some of you guys that are just joining, we already got 1600 plus y'all in here.
Today we're gonna be covering the DC sniper guys.
You guys have been requesting this one for a long time, the DC snipers, aka also known as the Beltway Sniper.
So let's go ahead and jump.
Oops, sorry, uh jump right into it.
Okay.
So uh the DC sniper attacks, DC sniper attacks.
Also knows that beltway sniper attacks were a series of coordinated shootings that occurred during the weeks, uh three weeks in October 20 2002 throughout the Washington metropolitan area, consisting of the District of Columbia, Maryland, and Virginia.
10 people were killed, and three others were critically wounded.
The snipers were John Alan Mohammed, this guy right here, okay.
Uh, who he was born December 31st, 1960, uh died November 10th, 2009 by lethal adjuston, was an American convicted murderer who, along with his partner and accomplice Lee Boyd Malvo, then age 17 carried out the DC sniper attacks of October 2002, killing 10 people.
Mohammed and Malvo were arrested in connection with the attacks on October 24, 2002, following tips from alert citizens.
Although the actions of the two individuals were classified by the media and psychop uh psycho psychopathy, psych psychopathy, I'm sorry, attributable to serial killer characteristics, whether or not they're uh psychopathy meets this classification or as a spree killer is debated by researchers.
And then here was his partner, Lee Boyd Malvo, okay.
Um, so he committed a series of murders, etc.
Let me see if I can get an image of this guy.
Uh Lee Boyd Malvo.
Show you guys.
He was a kid at the time when he got arrested.
Yeah, this is him.
Well, this is him now.
He's an adult now.
He was 17.
But this is him back in the day, guys.
All right.
And he's on the thumbnail as well for some of you guys that are wondering.
Um, and then here is the FBI's website right here where they actually have a whole page dedicated to these guys.
And when they caught them, um, and actually, I didn't know this, but one of the victims was actually an FBI analyst, uh, Linda Franklin.
So rest in peace to her, who was uh, you know, killed by a single bullet while leaving a home improvement store in Virginia with her husband.
Um and the FBI absolutely was involved in this investigation.
The three main agencies were uh the county police in this situation, the ATF, aka uh Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives, and the FBI, and they really dedicate a lot of personnel to this case.
I think over 400 agents were involved in this investigation, guys, back in 2002.
Um, because one of, you know, obviously, for number one, it was a national security thing.
It would have a lot of press.
And then number two, one of their own were murdered uh from these killers.
And another thing, too, real quick, because I was uh I was 12 years old when these shootings were going down, and just to give you guys an atmosphere of someone that actually lived through it.
Back in 2002, guys, keep in mind 9-11 had occurred a year prior, and there was a lot of hysteria when it came to terrorism, foreign acts, uh foreign um foreign individuals going ahead attacking the United States, etc.
So when this happened, I remember it was all over the news.
It was going crazy, and everyone was terrified, guys.
The whole uh Northeast was terrified because they didn't know if these guys were gonna be limited to the um DMV area or if they were gonna go to a New York City to a Boston, etc.
So and all and the thing is too, this is prior to the age of social media, but this thing was everywhere, and the press actually had a very how do I say this disturbing effect on the investigation, which we're gonna talk about here.
But they actually impeded this case significantly in some situations and antagonize situations where shootings happened that might have not necessarily occurred had the press just kept their nose out of the business.
But as usual, you know, they want to go ahead and get the story, break the story, make a lot of money.
Because back then, this was the only way people were getting their news.
We don't have this, we didn't have the same environment that we have now where there's all this independent media, you know, people laugh at CNN and Fox News nowadays, but back then they were the kings, guys.
You could not get your own, you could not get your news what if it did not come from the mainstream media or a newspaper.
So that's a very important distinction for you guys to understand of the climate back then.
So the mainstream uh narrative in the mainstream news was the only way people were informed of what the hell was going on.
And when I tell you that there was mass hysteria, people were terrified.
This was a nationwide manhunt, nationwide coverage.
It it doesn't do it justice.
It was everywhere.
And this was like right after 9-11.
Yes, a year later.
Right after.
Yeah.
This is crazy.
So the country was already super sensitive.
Um to this type of stuff.
Because no one knew what was going on.
I remember people were saying, Oh, yeah, these are some crazy white people, man.
Well, black people don't go around and shoot people for and snipe them.
Then next thing they know, stupid.
It actually was uh two African American guys.
So um that so that's just to give you all kind of a little bit of a climate of what it was like back then.
It was it was unprecedented, guys, unprecedented.
Um, and hell, there's a reason why all y'all requested it because clearly it, you know, it was shifting.
Um Junior goes, since you're doing cocaine cowboys, don't forget Willie Falcon and Sal Magulta.
Exactly, which is that's exactly what came to mind when she uh when he mentioned Grisel the Black, I was like, okay, if I'm gonna do that, then I'm gonna have to do it correctly.
I can't just cover her and not cover all the other uh traffickers that were involved in that situation.
That's gonna be a multi-part series as well.
Uh JB, I live in Bimore.
I remember this happening as a kid.
Yeah, so you were 12 and you were living in Connecticut back then.
Yeah.
So this that's like in middle school.
That's pretty close to Washington, isn't it?
It's like four hours away, but um, but the thing is is that everyone was scared that like, yo, these guys are because when they were doing the shootings, it was like in random places, so everyone was terrified that like they would go to like a New York or to a major city in the Northeast and make it happen.
And like, especially major cities were super on high alert because let's be honest here.
You know, when terrorists attack the United States, they're not gonna attack in the middle of nowhere, right?
They're not gonna attack and bumblefuck Iowa, they're gonna go attack a major U.S. city to send a message, right?
So um, everyone was terrified.
Um, and then also, speaking of which, real quick, just to give you guys a quick little reminder.
Guys, I covered um, and this actually it's amazing to me.
It is the 10-year anniversary of the Boston Marathon bombings two weeks ago.
Um, I covered the Boston Marathon bombing guys on this show.
Um, so go back and look through on on the on the playlist.
But I did I covered it when you know with I think I watched the Sarnavra brothers and everything else like that.
Because I was living in Boston at the time when uh when that terrorist attack happened, and you guys want to hear interesting story.
Uh what ended up happening.
So check this out.
Man, this brings back memories.
You were doing your paper, right?
2013, yep.
April.
I want to say it was like uh honor about April 15th, 2020.
I'm uh senior in college, guys, and I'm doing my thesis paper to get my bachelor's degree, right?
And I'll major in criminal justice.
I was writing a paper on how Homeland Security had done a pretty good job of staving off terrorist attacks in the United States since its creation in 2003.
Um, and I was making an argument saying that there had not been a successful terrorist attack on US soil since 9-11.
And I and I also used to back up my argument a bunch of terrorist attacks that were stopped, right?
And then I fucking get a phone call.
I'll never forget this shit.
I get a phone call from my supervisor, and I was internal with Homeland Security at the time uh to become with HSI.
I get a call and he's like, hey, uh, what are you doing?
And mind you, I had my phone off, I had the TV off.
I was like focused on writing this paper because I had to get that shit done.
It was doing like a day or so, right?
And everything turned off.
I was like, in my room, it was all dark and stuff.
I had the windows closed.
I'm sitting in my dorm just typing this thing up because you know I've waited crammed in to the last minute.
And he's like, and it was weird for him to call me in the middle of the day because he knew it was like finals week, and he's like, Hey, are you all right?
I was like, Yeah, I'm good.
What's what's going on?
I'm over here thinking like fuck it.
Like, did I do something?
Did I stupid?
Was I supposed to be at work or something?
What's going on here?
I'm all terrified.
And he's like, a bomb just went off at the at the uh at the finish line for the for the marathon.
And mind you guys, Northeastern was only about maybe a couple blocks away from where the um the bombing happened.
So uh, so he thought like maybe I was there watching or whatever, because anytime like an attack happens, guys, uh uh in the federal government, they typically do uh what you call like uh like a head count almost like they call everybody, make sure everybody's okay, where what happened, whatever.
So he called me and I was like, what the fuck?
And then I like you know, turn my phone on and I see like all this news coverage that a bomb, two bombs that went off at the Most American bombing finish line, which is our boy's history, and uh yeah, it was it was crazy, man.
It was it was wild.
Um, and then I had to go back to my paper and I delete that entire last paragraph and I had to rewrite it.
So give myself an L. Because I knew right then and there, I was like, Yeah, this is a terrorist attack.
I didn't even need the FBI FBI.
I think like two two days later, ended up um announcing that it wasn't indeed a terrorist attack, but I knew right then and there.
I was like, bruh, it's a rap.
This this is the L for Myron.
Uh okay.
So uh certified Tyro goes, Myron, my brother wants to be a special agent starting college in the fall.
Should he go for accounting or criminal justice?
Go for accounting, 100% go for accounting.
Uh secret vlogger, lived in the US 10 plus years, also speak a rare language.
Cool.
Uh, but speaking a rare language isn't as important as speaking uh in demand language.
Russian, Mandarin, Chinese, Arabic.
Those are languages that will help you a lot when it comes to getting involved in uh whether it be FBI or any type of uh the most important languages in the world as well.
Which one?
Well, number one is Mandarin, second, it's English, I think.
Yeah, third one you think is Spanish, fourth one will say Portuguese and five it's I think it's Harabian.
Okay.
I think I checked like you're not sure about the last one.
Uh supporting the show, these streams are not only entertaining but educational.
Keep them coming, sir.
Appreciate that, my friend.
Uh okay, so let's go back.
Um, so we're gonna go ahead and cover this documentary here, guys.
Um, it's called Hunting the DC Sniper, which I really enjoyed.
I was watching parts of it, but the reason why I like this one uh more than the others is because um it has more of a law enforcement angle, which I think anytime you want to really get a uh into the like the details and juice of a case, you should always talk to the investigators that were involved in the case versus like random reporters because let's keep it a thousand reporters don't know shit.
Um now to be safe here.
I got other documentaries ready to go, right?
In case you know YouTube hits me with like as you guys know, they'll be like, oh, it looks like you're straight like you're streaming uh something that's copyright, blah, blah, blah.
And they like turn the stream off for a little bit and then they turn it back on.
So if they do do that, we're live on Twitch right now as well.
Um, and I have other backups.
So I'm ready.
Today, I am ready.
So uh without further ado, let's go ahead and play this documentary.
And uh we'll pause it, obviously, for commentary, and I'll give you guys more insight uh and to explain any law enforcement jargon that might come in.
So uh anything you got, Angie, before we get into it.
Nothing.
Okay, she eats the banana.
Cool.
So you you know the jokes are coming, by the way, for that, right?
That you're eating a banana on camera.
The jokes, you know, they're coming no matter what.
So it is what it is.
All right, let's get into it, guys.
But this October, everything changed.
A beautiful evening.
Um, very well lit, crowded parking lot.
Anytime after five o'clock, people are coming to buy their groceries post-work.
Um, and it was just this sort of a normal day.
One of the cashiers there, she'd been standing doing her job, and a bullet had come close by her head.
Four minutes later that Wednesday evening, there was another shooting.
A man walking across a busy supermarket cop bog was shot in the back and killed.
Police were unnerved by the random murder and the skill of the executioner.
I didn't dive into a lot of detail.
And just so you guys know, the uh the main mastermind behind this, uh, John Alan Mohammed, uh born John Alan Williams, um, he was a sharpshooter in the military.
Okay, uh, he wasn't a sniper, but he was a sharpshooter in the military.
So that also explains why these guys were so deadly.
Uh sharpshooter, someone that has uh really proficient um accuracy with a firearm.
And he was and he was uh awarded like uh he basically got that distinction in the military when you're sharpshooter.
Oh, okay.
But it did seem strange that in other words, you don't miss.
We didn't have a lot of evidence.
So we didn't really anticipate.
All right, Chief Charles Moose.
Guys, this dude right here, bruh, I remember as a kid, he was on the news every day talking about the shootings.
Now, just so you guys understand, when you are the um chief, right, of a county, or the sheriff, right?
Depending on whether you're up, you know, north or south in the United States, whatever it may be.
Anytime crazy stuff like this happens, you are under an enormous amount of pressure to get it done.
Because when you're the chief of a county, you are considered the top law enforcement official in that county, right?
Now, obviously, you got your Fed and local partners, etc.
But when you're the sheriff or the chief, whatever, you are looked at as the main guy because you're the uniform, you're the face, it's a political position, you're right under the mayor, etc.
So uh sometimes under uh you know, you you're dealing with the governor directly.
Sometimes if it's huge, so you're put under an enormous amount of pressure to give updates on the investigation while simultaneously concealing parts of the investigation so that the investigators can do their job.
So it's a very tricky dance, guys, whenever you have a case that has this kind of media attention to it, where you want to divulge enough to give the to give the audience um an insight as to what's going on and tell them what to do and make them feel some sort of relief, but at the same time, you don't want to divulge enough where it'll impact your investigators' chances of catching the bad guys.
So it's a very tough position to be in as a sheriff, man, because you are the face of the investigative effort, and all the good and the bad is gonna befall you.
And this guy definitely inadvertently became an overnight celebrity because of this case.
The Thursday morning.
The Thursday morning.
741.
I got a page that said a man had been killed on a lawnmower, the lawnmower had exploded, was how it actually came across the page.
I thought that was very unusual.
James Buchanan, a gardener, was shot in the back and killed whilst mowing a customer's lawn.
Um when people call 911 on this situation, by the way, guys, they thought like he had like got cut by the lawnmower because there was so much blood.
So they thought it was like a lawnmower accident or whatever.
So when they called 911, they're saying, like, I think it's a lot more accident.
He might have chopped himself up or something like that.
But when police arrived on scene, they realized that he had actually been shot while he was mowing his lawn.
And this is what caused people so much fear.
Random people doing random, you know, typical errands were getting killed out of nowhere, and there was no rhyme or reason.
There was no connection between them.
There was no um demographic that was being killed specifically.
This the shooters didn't discriminate, they shot at everyone.
But the pages were coming through fairly quickly.
So I get a page has been a shooting at the mobile station.
Yes, guys, she got a page.
Cell phones were not really a thing like that back then in the day, man.
It was a whole different time.
People were getting pages back then.
then 31 minutes later prem kumar walakar a taxi driver was killed by a single gunshot to the chest Maybe it's a terrorist.
For real.
I mean, you know, no, they haven't ruled it in or out.
I mean, it it could be the new wave of terrorism.
What better way to terrorize a neighborhood than starting?
Yeah, back then, if you want to make a phone call, guys, you have to go to a payphone that weren't the that was like on the corner or whatever it may be.
Like I know that's like you guys are like, well, probably what the hell are you talking about?
Like, oh hell no!
Back then, guys, like cell phones were kind of like a luxury.
Not many people had them, and they didn't have the same uh power and reliance that they have now.
Like if you if you did have a phone back then, it was like a piece of shit flip phone, couldn't do nothing on it.
Like ringtones were maybe just starting to become a thing back then.
So yeah, you were using payphones if you needed to make a phone call on the fly.
Wow, that was so funny.
You're reading the chat.
You really scared me these time with that sound.
Oh, the hell the hell no.
I was so fucking watching the video again.
Killing people at random in different places, all within a given, you know, area.
25 minutes later, outside a post office.
Sarah Ramos was sitting reading on a bench.
She was killed by a bullet to the head.
She was killed by a bullet to the head.
It was so you guys can see, literally, no, there's there's no difference here.
Excuse me.
There's no rhyme or reason why he's shooting shooting and killing people.
It's like random people doing random things.
So that's what had everyone so scared.
Is that this guy, similar to the Night Stalker, by the way, didn't have a certain type of person that he was going after, right?
You look at other serial killers like John Wayne Gacy or Ted Bundy, Ted Bundy, like, you know, younger women between 18 and 25 that had darker hair, typically college age students use the same method, right?
Oh, my arm is broken, help me out, right?
Or um John Wayne Gacy, like teenage boys, right?
That he would get to employ for his uh for his business.
But the but like just like the Night Stalker, which also had California in a frenzy back in the 80s, these dudes were just attacking and shooting anyone, and that makes it way harder for the police to solve the crime because they don't have a track record and they don't know what to look for.
Do you have something, Andrew?
Yeah, the the uh like the connection with between all these killers were like compulsion, basically.
Yes.
So I don't know.
I don't know how to see these guys.
Exactly.
So no one had a clue what these guys were.
Like FBI profilers were were puzzled.
It's like it was a ghost moving methodically through the county, shooting at people indiscriminately.
And it was we couldn't proactively get in front of what he was doing.
It's like we're always moving behind.
He lives right in this area somewhere.
He's too familiar with it.
He lives right around here.
I don't know if he's on foot at this point or what, but um he's really sick.
Evil.
For a lot of people, it just kind of said everyone's at risk from a historical context.
generally serial killers go at a much different pace.
Chief Lisa and I looked at each other.
We looked at each other, such as God, please don't let it be another one.
An hour and 20 minutes later, another shooting.
Lorianne Lewis Rivera, a child carer, was shot in the back and killed whilst vacuuming out her people carrier.
See, so as you guys can see, he's over here shooting wow, Caucasian men, Indian men, Caucasian women, Hispanic women, he didn't give a shit who he was shooting.
So this obviously had the police going crazy, bro.
And there wasn't much time in between shootings.
So as they were you know arriving on scene to try to deal with one crime scene, they had another one literally hours later.
Committed Montgomery County police chief Charles Moose had headed some major cases in his time, but he had never handled anything of this magnitude before.
Nothing like this has ever happened in Montgomery County.
Uh, this is a very safe community.
Uh our homicide rate just increased by 25% in one day.
Captain Yo, that is crazy.
Your murder rate goes up 25% in one day.
Dude, that is literally like a political like killer right there.
Like, you know, you the mayor, y'all want to get re-elected.
Oh, murder rate just went on 25%.
That my friends.
That is bad.
So you can imagine him and the mayor and everybody else just fucking sweating like goddamn man.
Nancy Demi had been in her job working alongside Chief Moose for only three weeks when the killing started.
You don't know any more except for that there are various genders, races, ages, um, that are of individuals that have been victims of shootings.
That's what we have right now.
But all anybody could do at that time was confirm.
Confirm that we had a victim, confirm that they were shot, confirm that we had witnesses to the victims falling.
But that's that doesn't help the public.
That doesn't even help the police.
Chief Moose put all 1100 Montgomery County police officers on high alert.
It just seemed as though the shootings were gonna never stop.
It wasn't clear, you know, where and when the next strike would be.
And that's horrible for you guys as an investigator, guys, because the thing is, is that for you to solve the case, since you don't really have a pattern or anything, you need another crime to occur so that you can go ahead and just get piece by piece each crime scene and try to link things.
So it's kind of the catch 22 where you don't want another crime to happen, but you need another crime to happen so that you can figure out who the hell these guys are, because each crime scene is offering such little evidence that you need more and more crime scenes to be able to piece it together.
So this is kind of the situation that investigators face when they're dealing with serial killers or spree killers or everything else like that, is they need more crimes to occur to find these guys.
*music*
Everyone was at risk.
Here's the mayor.
You know, he was sweating as well.
He was like, God damn, bro, I might not get re-elected.
Mama mia.
people just doing ordinary things and they lost their life because of it Duncan, mayor of Montgomery County, and Moose's boss was identified as being a potential target for the sniper.
He was assigned um Bodyguards as protection.
You don't know what the history of the person is, you don't know who's doing it.
You don't know if are they living in your community?
Did they grow up in your community?
We didn't know.
And that's why there was such fear.
We held our breath, hoping someone else wouldn't be shot.
And you sort of wait minute by minute, half hour by half hour, hour by hour.
If he can elude about 400, 500 cops at a time.
He's only one person or two people.
That's kind of scary.
If you're in the wrong place at the wrong time, then it's your time.
You know, I think he's planned it.
this area this location and whoever walks through That night, levels of fear in the community rocketed when the sniper moved unexpectedly away from Montgomery County and into the American Capitol.
Okay, so now shit's about to get real.
Because it's one thing to operate, you know, in Montgomery County.
Obviously, you got people going crazy because you're shooting random people with no rhyme or reason indiscriminately.
But now you move into the um the United States Capitol of Washington, DC.
Remember, guys, United States back then was extremely sensitive to terrorism.
We had just gotten attacked by 9-11.
There was an anthrax hysteria.
We're preparing to go to war with Iraq.
This was a wild time.
So for the shooters to move over to Washington, DC, the capital of the United States, bro, it just elevated it to a whole other level.
Things are about to get wild.
The sniper sixth victim, 72-year-old Pascal Charlotte was shot and killed as he crossed a busy Washington DC street.
I've seen gunshot wounds, you know, regarding hunting situations.
Yeah, and it's this it looked very similar.
I've also seen gunshot wounds in the district that have happened with pistols.
I just knew it looked different.
Um, I'm not a doctor, so I couldn't really tell if he was gonna make it or not.
Um from what I saw, it was it was pretty devastating.
This individual is still out there.
We don't know where this person is.
Just as a regular citizen as a police officer, as anybody who lives in this country, it's devastating to think that this can happen.
I'm going to go ahead and get the camera on the camera.
Chief Moose, he goes, You might as well get ready.
This is gonna be this is gonna be a long couple days.
And when we left that night, I remember he said, get some sleep, get it quick, because I don't know how much more you're going to get.
As the Thursday came to a close, So just so you guys know, anytime something crazy like this happens, whether it's a terrorist attack, you got an active shooter, um, you got someone at large, the agency that's responsible, their personnel, they're not sleeping, dude.
Um, and and I can tell you guys this from personal experience.
You got a missing child, you got anything wild going on.
You're just not gonna go to sleep.
You basically have to make things happen in a short amount of time because when you're in a response state, which a lot of times these crazy things happen, now you're in a response state.
You have to basically get things going immediately and not wait on time.
The best thing you can hope for is someone could come in and relieve you for a few hours, so you can just go home, sleep a little bit, you literally wake up, sometimes not even shower, and then go right back to the office and do what you were doing.
That's what goes down whenever you have emergency situations like this and panics.
And I remember I had a case like this.
I'll talk about this for y'all one day.
Um, but I had a case where we had guys using fake border patrol units, right?
Border patrol vehicles to smuggle illegal aliens aliens into the United States.
Now I know you guys are probably like, wait, hold on, wait, wait, wait.
What the reason why that's such a big problem is that you're using a law enforcement vehicle, which were fake to smuggle legal aliens in.
Imagine what you can also smuggle in with that.
You could smuggle in obviously bombs, weapons, or worse yet, terrorists.
And the thing is a lot of times with terrorist guys is they would pay a lot of people that like hate the United States or whatever, they would pay premium costs to be smuggled into the United States because they knew, right, that what they would be called, you know, they're an exotic, right?
If they're from the Middle East or they're from any of these countries that are on the terrorist watch list, they typically pay more to ensure that they get into the United States.
So if you got an organization utilizing fake border patrol units, right, to smuggle people into the country, and they're not getting caught for a while, and we finally did uncover it, you're running down leads like crazy, which I'll talk about this case in more details.
One of the cases that actually made me grow gray hairs.
Um I got pictures and all that other stuff from it.
This was back in 2015.
I was lead case agent on it, guys.
I didn't sleep for like a week.
Uh actually a few weeks, actually.
Um, because we were nailing down every goddamn lead in that investigation because it was a serious national security uh risk.
So um, I'll go over to that in detail, but I can definitely tell y'all when you have big cases like this from a reactionary standpoint, you're running down every lead, you ain't sleeping.
Very stressful situation.
Chief Moose and his force had been left to chase a trail of death with few substantive clues.
At least thought the sniper was using a high-powered rifle.
But the only evidence they had was bullet fragments retreat.
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I've actually done these investigations, guys.
So like the goddamn video, subscribe to the channel if you haven't already.
We only got 800 plus you likes here.
We should be having easily 2,000 likes.
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From the victims' bodies on Friday morning, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms, the ATF, confirmed that all the victims had been killed by the same gun.
It's around being used.
All right, anytime weapons are involved, guys, in in investigation, especially people getting shot nine out of ten times, you're gonna have to bring the ATF in, uh, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms.
I've done podcasts before where I've explained uh intimately what they do.
But long story short, they're the lead agency when it comes to any type of firearms violations.
If you want to go ahead and get a gun traced, they're the ones that have the capability of doing something called an e-trace, where they can trace the firearm back based off serial number to the original purchaser.
And a lot of the times, if you catch a gun in a crime scene, you won't know how that gun came to be in that criminal situation.
So, what you could do is once you trace the gun back to the original purchaser, let's say it was bought 10 years ago from you know, John XYZ, you go to John XYZ.
Hey, this gun was found at this crime scene.
Uh, can you tell us what you did with it?
Oh, I sold it to this individual.
Okay, boom.
And then it gives you kind of a starting point to begin the investigation to figure out how the gun got into the hands of the criminal that eventually used it to commit the crime.
So that is why e-traces are so important.
And that's why if you have a gun that has a serial number scratched off, it's a felony offense because it disables the ATF's ability to trace the gun back to the original source and conduct the investigation.
The type of ammunition was in the.22 caliber family.
And right here, Michael Butcher, ATF special agent.
So this is probably one of the lead case agents, one of the case agents or someone that was intimately involved in this investigation.
And that's why I like this documentary is because it's giving you guys insight from the actual investigators that were involved in this case.
Meaning the head of the bullet, the projectile that leaves the bullet, um, was the diameter of a 22 caliber rifle.
It is uh a pretty damaging round, high velocity, 3,000 feet per second.
So again, it you won't even know you're already hit before you you hear the sound.
And this is the 223.
It's a significantly larger, just to give you an idea.
With the nine millimeter on your left, the 40 caliber in the center, and the two, two, three round on the right.
Bam, yes, you see the difference right there.
You got the nine mil, the 40, and then the 223.
And just so you guys know, um, most law enforcement agencies now are going back to the nine millimeter.
Uh, you know, most agencies used the the 40 caliber for several years.
I remember when I got on the job, wage as I back in 2013.
We were using the this um the uh the gun that you were issued was the six-hour P229 DAK, the long ass trigger pull.
That gun was trash.
I immediately bought a Glock uh once I got on the job and use that instead.
Uh 9 mil because they had they gave you a list of guns that were approved.
But uh all the uh most of the agencies now, and I think they the HSI um issued gun is switched, it's not no longer the P229.
But uh, but now a lot of law enforcement agencies are going back to 9 mil because what they found was when you do ballistic testing with 40 caliber and 9mm, there's virtually no difference in uh the stopping power of the nine millimeter.
The only thing is though, you have to have high quality nine millimeter, right, for it to qu to be as strong as the 40 caliber, which a lot of the times with law enforcement they give you the you know the hollow points, etc.
They give you the spear law enforcement rounds, those are good.
Um, but if you got a good nine nine uh nine millimeter quality, it's equivalent to 40 caliber.
And the reason why that's important is because with nine millimeter, you can have more rounds in the in the magazine, which obviously is very important, and a gunfight, and nine millimeter is cheaper than 40 caliber.
So as long as you buy good nine millimeter, typically it's the same as a 40.
But 223, that's a whole other uh game.
And almost counterintuitive police used.
Yeah, and I the people are probably gonna argue with me on that like, oh no, 40 caliber is better.
What are you talking about?
Blah blah blah.
They've done literally hundreds, if not thousands of ballistic success on this guys because when the because most law enforcement agencies switch the 40 caliber, right?
Especially after the uh the FBI shooting back in 1980, I think 86, which I covered on this channel as well, by the way.
That was a pivotal turning point when it comes to law enforcement and weapons was the uh I think it was 1986 FBI shooting down here in Miami, which I did a whole podcast on that too.
You guys should check that out.
That's when law enforcement agency switched from revolvers, right, over to semi-automatic pistols because the FBI ended up chasing these two guys down, getting into a big ass gunfight, and a bunch of agents died because their weapons, quite frankly, just didn't have enough stopping power compared to the people that they were chasing.
But to summarize it for all, yes, there's a nine millimeter 40 caliber debacle going on, but bro, it's been proven at this point that nine millimeter is equivalent.
That's why all the law enforcement agencies pretty much are switching back.
The FBI, HSI, DEA, um, ATF, they're all switching back to 9 mil because it just you can carry more rounds and it's cheaper, so it's a W all around.
These two rounds, which are actually much heavier in terms of the projectile than the 223.
The big difference is the speed at which these rounds travel.
These rounds are down around 1,500 feet per second, where this round can be anywhere between 3100 and 3500 feet per second.
The round is very devastating in terms of its speed, its impact, the damage it does.
Uh the best comparison I can give you is it's like the wake of a boat.
The faster it goes, the broader the wake behind it.
This bullet does essentially the same thing.
It enters with a very small hole.
But just expands rapidly and does massive internal damage.
Speculation was widespread on the sniper's identity.
Was he Al Qaeda?
A rogue French foreign legion soldier or a local resident determined to terrorize his neighborhood.
That's an understatement.
Everyone was going wild, think it was rid uh related to um Islamic terrorist groups, right?
Islamophobia was in full effect, guys in 2002 in the United States at this point.
Then the mysterious killer struck for the seventh time, 100 miles south of Montgomery County in Virginia.
*gunshot*
So now he hit in three different areas, Montgomery County, Virginia, and Washington, DC.
Bro, the the police at this point were like BOOM book.
A woman was shot in a car park.
The bullet passed through the open door of her vehicle before piercing her side.
Miraculously she survived.
The killer had crossed state lines.
And Chief Moose's sniper investigation was no longer solely a local matter.
Fifty FBI investigators joined the hundred strong Montgomery County detectives to work on the case.
The sniper killings had become big news and the mighty US networks joined local stations outside Montgomery County police headquarters.
The sniper killings had made the county infamous, and its police chief an unwilling celebrity.
Yeah, the end of the year.
Working 19 hour days, Chief Moose and Mayor Duncan prepared for the week to come.
They agreed that schools would remain open.
Well, well, this is gonna lead to something that might not be so good.
Um you guys will see here in a second.
Early on Monday morning, Moose spoke out to reassure the public.
Now guys, just so you understand, keep in mind there's been several shootings now at this point in three different locations.
People are scared to leave their homes, right?
So they're saying, hey, you know, because the j their job is to kind of keep the pandemonium and the fear down.
So the last thing they want to do is close the schools down, because if they close the schools down, that's gonna basically let the uh panic the shooters, yeah.
It's gonna create panic and it's gonna basically let the shooters feel like they won.
Because that's what they want.
They want things to basically go on their frame and they want people to be terrified.
That is a point of terrorism.
It's to terrorize the community into doing well into it's a being fearful, not doing what they what they typically want to do and put pressure on the government to change for their radical uh beliefs or agendas, right?
So they don't want to close the schools down for obvious reasons, and his job again as the chief of police is to go ahead and calm uh well, chief of the Montgomery County is to calm the community down, which is a very daunting task because your job is to calm the community down while simultaneously not giving up too much information to hurt the investigation.
And if you guys notice, all right, I want y'all to pay attention.
Anytime there's some crazy situation going on with crime, the mayor in any situation, whether it's you uh, you know, New York or whatever may be, they're typically gonna let the the law enforcement guy do all the talking, and they're just gonna be in the back like support.
And the reason for that is because mayors and politicians never want to be the ones to give the bad news.
They're gonna get they're gonna let the top law enforcement official do it, which nine out of ten times it's gonna be the sheriff or the chief of police at that point.
Sometimes the Fed will c feds will come in um and give a little bit of uh, you know, reference to certain points or whatever, but in general, it almost always falls on the commissioner, the sheriff, or whoever the top law enforcement guy is from the local standpoint.
When the Boston Marathon bombing happened, uh you know, uh I think it was Deval Patrick, it was the mayor at the time in Boston, but he was letting the commissioner do most of the talking.
It was like, uh, yeah, um, we will defeat these guys.
Okay.
Chief Commissioner, it's on you, and you just like get out the way and let him handle the rest of it.
So as a politician, they want to stay outside of giving any type of negative news.
Um, so I'll be wanting to ask you because I have it written down here.
I re I was reading because I wasn't even born in this time, you know.
Yeah, so I wanted to ask you.
Uh I was reading that they c the schools didn't close, but they actually like stopped doing like uh outside activities and this.
No like recess and stuff.
I remember that.
Like stopping recesses and all this stuff.
So you as a kid, because you said you were like twelve years old, and I know you were in Connecticut, but like how was it?
Like when you watched the news, like what what these these people kept saying, like so like you couldn't escape it.
Like it was on all the news channels 24-7.
They were covering it, and and we're gonna talk about we're gonna see this later in the documentary, guys.
Like they were covering to it to an extent and actually hurt the investigation because they were so thirsty to cover this thing that it was round the clock coverage on it.
Like you turned on Fox CNN, and this was back when cable was a big thing, by the way.
Um it was just this, and since they were constantly covering it, they needed new information.
So uh, and at the time they had a tip line open, and uh and any tip that came in that the news thought was like worthy, they would cover that too.
So that would send everyone running around in random uh directions, like it was it was crazy.
It was a wild, wild time.
Like when I was in school, we didn't have lockdowns, but it definitely was something where um they were concerned and they were keeping their finger on the pulse, and if the shooting started going north, they were definitely prepared to close.
Wow, like yeah, because this isn't uh like from a geographic perspective.
You got Washington DC and the DMV down here, Connecticut is over here.
So if it started happening in New York or Southern Connecticut, because I was in Central Connecticut at the time, the schools were definitely gonna shut down.
But did they ever like or or at least like start putting um not shut down, uh, they will start putting restrictions like hey, no going outside, like yeah.
Okay, so because there are like loads.
I I've read ready reading that there they're like lows, like school trips that take kids to Washington from around areas.
Oh, yeah, they cancel they would cancel any of that for sure.
Yeah, I can imagine.
So, yeah, because also these shootings were all like in the morning, like they are all like 7 41 a.m., 8 a.m., 9 a.m.
That's crazy.
Like these are morning killers, yeah.
Yeah, they they they would just wake up, I guess, have some Kellogg's and you know, or some weaties, and like breath breakfast of champions, the next thing you know.
That's insane.
Yeah, these guys were on.
I I see why they will close the schools and all this stuff, yeah.
Absolutely makes sense.
Clearly, we are at a level of anxiety with our morning rush hour getting ready to start.
When again, report a regular normal opening of school.
Yeah, serial killers.
If you're not what I'm saying, with a C. Guys, do me a favor.
Uh, we got almost 25 uh over 2500, you guys watching on all platforms.
So go ahead and like the video, please.
Subscribe to the channel if you haven't already.
Uh, if you guys can come on over to YouTube.
I don't foresee that we'll get hit with like some kind of copy bullshit, but um come on over to YouTube and watch or watch on Twitch and YouTube, but just open up a tap and like the video on YouTube uh so you can get pushed in algo.
We expect a regular school day.
We expect a regular school day.
I'm never gonna win dad of the year.
I didn't do that really well.
Um I guess I got all wrapped up in some career thing or something, but between that and divorce.
Are you laughing?
Somebody said fresh was the police chief.
Just happy, the chat is just going crazy.
Yeah, y'all are fucking funny, bro.
Y'all actually pretty funny here.
You know, I'm not someone put a baby bottle and said, Angie, you drop this.
I'm not the dad of the year, but police officers were supposed to protect the children.
There's been a shooting at a school this morning.
A child has been shot in front of the Benjamin a 13-year-old boy had been hit by a single shot to the chest.
He was critically injured.
A in the morning, yo, could you imagine, guys?
Like, you put out uh an announcement as the police chief saying we're not closing on the schools, you know, you're safe, let's go ahead and have school, and then a kid gets shot the next day, bruh.
That is an L beyond L L's, man.
So you're gonna feel and you guys are gonna see here how the chief reacts to this.
He was the sniper's second survivor.
Chief Moose was devastated.
He was upset over a child being hurt in general, but then over the fact that his words may have been the catalyst that put that child in jeopardy or or caused that situation to occur.
Was a very heavy, heavy feeling for him.
Someone is so fresh, though.
That they shot a child.
Yeah, he does look a little express, a lighter version.
Yeah.
Y'all are hilarious in the chat, man.
Now all of our victims have been innocent, have been defenseless.
But now we're stepping over the line because our children don't deserve this.
So parents, please do your job tonight.
Engage your children, be there for them.
We're gonna need it.
We're gonna need you to support them.
But stepping over the line, shooting a kid.
I guess it's gonna be really really personal now.
So if there's any doubt out there, what law enforcement is gonna be engaged in, what we're gonna be doing, then you can remove our doubt.
Now police felt the sniper was not only watching, but possibly reacting to their every word.
A chow defenseless, hunt down a chow, shoot a child in the back.
It just kind of um it's very uh insulting.
Um the whole community just shuddered to see a child shot.
Uh just brought it.
Not only see a child shot, but see a child shot after they make the announcement that they're not closing down the schools.
These dudes were uh were on some demon time.
Even more anger, more outrage, and yet we couldn't express that because we didn't want to incite whoever was doing this to do even more to shoot more children.
You know, you're starting to be a brace.
It was the longest week in Montgomery County police chief Moose's career.
A sniper killer had shot eight people, six fatally.
The community was paralyzed with fear.
The local football and baseball seasons were suspended, and all the schools in the area were keeping children locked inside.
Heavily armed police and helicopters monitored the local schools.
Then at the school where the boy was shot, Moose and his team got their first major break.
And just so you guys know, when you close down a school, that's a big deal because now you're closing down a school, which means they can't continue the curriculum.
They can't continue the curriculum.
That means the kids aren't going to get do the education that they need, right?
Based on certain parts, because as you know, you have to have you know, schools got to be accredited to a certain degree, they got to teach the kids certain things, which you know we can make that debate whether it's indoctrination or not.
But this is back in 2002, so it's not as bad as now with this crazy woke world that we're in.
But I digress.
The point is is that when you shut down the schools, you significantly limit the county's ability to push the kids through the public education system, which sets everything back, and not only that, it affects commerce, it affects businesses.
Everything starts to take a backwards turn, right?
Which is why when the pandemic happened with you know the beer bug that if you know what I'm saying, um, Trump was so reluctant to close the country down because he knows the ramifications when you stop businesses, you stop schools, etc.
Okay.
And keep in mind, we didn't have the technology and the ability to use Zoom, call in school, you know, uh classes online, none of that crap was a thing.
Man, we just had America online with that long ass hard dial up.
If y'all know what I'm saying, there was no such thing as Zoom calls or any of that shit back then, man.
The internet was still slow as hell.
You're using dialogue, right?
To get onto the fucking thing.
You were online, you got mail.
That was the fastest internet that you have back then in 2002, bro.
For all my people that are old enough to remember.
So there was none of this crap.
So we didn't have the infrastructure back then of the technology technology to educate children on a mass scale or conduct business on a mass scale because the internet wasn't a thing like that back then, guys.
So just imagine how much this messed up this community.
This uncovered a cryptic piece of evidence.
However, they couldn't contain their find.
The information was leaked to the hungry press.
It could be a critical clue in the sniper shootings.
The gunman reportedly has left a message for police.
It's a tarot card, the death card written on it, dear policeman.
I am God.
Channel 9 reports the tarot card was found like the media fit.
My man left a tarot card on the scene.
I'm going to pull up a picture for it for you guys.
Demon time for real.
What else was written on the tarot card?
It said, Do not release to the press.
Chief was upset because we knew that said nothing.
Do not release the press.
Press goes ahead and says, Forget about it.
And get releases it anyway.
Fucking L. To be released to the press, were there going to be consequences for this by the shooter for having done what he said not to do?
Was this an effort to him to communicate to us?
And uh had we violated that relationship that the shootermeyer started it tried to start with us.
So he was angry with the media for having put it in there and angry with law enforcement for having leaked it to the media.
I have not received any message that the citizens of Montgomery County won't channel 9 or the Washington Post or any other media outlet to solve this case.
If if they do, then let me know.
We will go and do other police work, and we will turn this case over to the media.
It was just like every thing that we wanted to try was put out for consumption.
Here's the infamous terror card right here, guys.
Okay.
So you guys can see.
Um it says here, call death, right?
And then call me God written up top with quotes, and then it goes in the back.
For you, Mr. Police, uh code, call me God.
Do not release to the press.
Okay.
And they were the press leaked it anyway, which you know was not a good move.
But hey, they were thirsty for views back then.
And this thing was all over the news, so they needed content.
Remember, guys, they had 24-7 coverage on this thing, so they needed content, unfortunately.
So the thirst was definitely real.
And then obviously the snipers looked at it like you triggered my trap card and kept.
You know, you're kind of going, well, is it like does the media want this to continue?
As head of the sniper task force, Chief Moose was being pushed to the limit.
We're waiting to hear from you.
Can you say if you've heard from the person you're communicating with?
Anything about the investigation, that kind of detail would be inappropriate.
The intense media interest in the case was becoming overwhelming.
The men and women involved in this.
If Chief Moose projects uh a sense to the public that this investigation is out of control, or that they they have no real information about what's going on and who's behind it, then with a few more shootings.
I think we get to a situation where the public will begin to panic.
Okay, thank you.
I don't think it's too much to say that you could reach a level of pandemonium out here and frustration that um will be very hard to contain.
With no major leads, only setbacks in the investigation.
There were calls for the FBI to take over Moose's case.
President Bush agreed that federal support should be available for the sniper manhood.
He sent seasoned FBI investigator, special agent Gary Bold to assist.
All right, so now we got that uh FBI coming in.
FBI open up!
Now, common misconception that people think from the movies and everything else that I'm gonna clear up right now.
People think, oh, the FBI's coming in to take over the investigation, blah, blah, blah.
Guys, it rarely, if ever, actually operates that way.
Typically, when an agency has an investigation, they will stay the lead investigation, and then if the feds do come in, they're either gonna assist, or if they do take over the investigation, they're gonna take it over because The crime that is being committed either is discovered to be or ends up turning into an investigation that that agency that was brought in ends up investigating.
For example, let's say it turns out to be a murder investigation at first.
Then they find out that there are the individuals that were involved, they're actually committing these murders in furtherance of some type of agenda that leads to terrorism.
Well, then at that point, FBI opened up.
The FBI is going to come in and get involved because terrorism is their primary uh investigative area.
And it's mandated, by the way, in the government, whether you're state, local Fed, whatever, if there's a terrorism nexus, the FBI must be involved.
They are the lead agency in all terrorism cases.
So for me, for example, I'll give you all uh uh professional experience here with this.
I had a national security investigation that involves some individuals, right?
That had some connections to uh an organization that may or may not have been on the on the watch list.
So I had to do my due diligence and bring the FBI involved and and and um into the situation.
Thankfully, my co-case agent was on the FBI joint terrorism task force.
So it was very simple.
Since he was already basically, he had two hats, he had FBI hat and H SIA.
He was HSI special agent, but it was assigned to the joint terrorism task force.
I was just able to go through him to do everything that I needed to do.
And we basically did our notifications that way, right?
Which is the importance of having task force officers.
So but anything that's national security related or terrorism related, the FBI is going to be involved.
And remember, guys, this is 2002.
This is peak, you know.
Uh you know, U.S. fear of terrorism because 9-11 had just happened.
We had the anthrax attacks, we're prepping to invade Iraq at this point.
There was a war on terror going on back then.
This is almost this is over 20 years ago.
But I remember this vividly.
So obviously the FBI is going to be involved.
And then also keep in mind that there was enormous press coverage on this.
So they're like, yo, we need to get this thing solved.
Let's get federal resources in.
And the FBI is the most well-funded federal law enforcement agency in the United States.
This is prior to um homeland security being created.
So they're gonna jump in and give some aid.
And then also, you know, in the back of every mind, everyone's minds at this point, they're thinking, ends this a terrorist investigation.
So they're looking at it like bring the FBI in.
And if it does end up being terrorism, they could come in and assist and take over from that point.
But keep in mind, this is still going to be a Montgomery County-led investigation, guys.
Because at this point, all we got is a bunch of shootings, which murder nine out of ten times, guys, is always going to be a state investigation, unless they're able to tie it to some other crime.
This must have been on TV all the time.
All the time, man.
You couldn't escape it.
You couldn't escape it.
I remember they would stop TV shows sometimes to cover to give coverage on this.
It was an interesting uh situation for me because I'd never met Chief Moose before.
And I was very sensitive to the fact that so now the bureau's involved.
So you have the ATF and Montgomery involved in the beginning because there was a firearm involved, and then obviously the state, local police take over murder investigations, but now you got the bureau coming in, which at this point they're not the lead agency.
Then he would think I was coming in to take the investigation over.
President Bush backed Chief Moose and confirmed he would continue to lead the sniper case.
And that's a common misconception.
A lot of times people think that the feds come in and they just take over the investigations.
That's not how it goes, guys.
That's rarely, if ever, how it goes.
The feds, a lot of times come in and assist, and um, nine out of ten times there's really good working relations between the state, local, and fed partners.
Um, it's not like the movies, guys.
That's a very, very common uh stereotype, but it's not true.
Special agent bold called up the rapid response unit.
They arrived with a blank check and within 24 hours set up a fully operational sniper command center.
I guess I need to.
And that's one of the beauties of having the feds involved.
You can go ahead and set up, you get the extra funding and the help, and they had a command center set up in 24 hours.
Now, guys, you're probably wondering what the fuck is a command center?
A command center, guys.
Anytime you got a national crisis going on like that, whether it's a terrorism attack, whether it's a mass shooter, et cetera, and you need to be able to get this case solved in a quick amount of time and you don't have leads, you get you establish something called a command center, right?
I remember I'll never forget this.
When the um Boston Marathon bombing happened, the FBI set up a command center at their um at Federal Plaza over there in downtown Boston at their headquarters.
And what ends up happening is all the leads that come in, they get all the phone calls come into one place, all the leads come in, and they disperse the leads to different investigators from different agencies that are involved in the situation, and they're able to have a command post where all the you know, all the brass, all the leadership, the case agents, etc.
are all in one location working together, fielding the calls, uh getting the leads and um working the investigation together so they have one unified path towards getting the case solved.
And a command post helps for that significantly.
Any type of big case like that, whether if you guys watch my 9-11 breakdown, they ended up turning a parking garage into a command post.
If you watch my uh Boston Marathon bombing, they end up having uh a command post, and obviously a mass shooter situation like this where they don't have the individual identified.
Step number one, create a command post so that everyone can be under one roof, one house, getting all the leads and working together to have a unified front against finding these guys because especially when you're getting the the uh public involved and getting calls, you need to be able to field those calls and give out leads and divvy them out to other investigators to follow them down.
Um well, I just want to say, yeah, you guys are right.
Like, I don't know what an anthrax ace.
Oh, anthrax.
Oh, so my bad.
That's good quite good.
Question.
Sometimes I got I'm glad that Angie asked these questions because I I you know I'm working at a thousand miles per hour, and some of you guys might not know some of the jargon I use.
If you get uh for some of you younger people, anthrax was like basically this like powder that was being pushed through the mail and mailed to people, and if you like inhale it, it was basically like deadly, and it would get people killed.
And when the Afterx attack began, it happened right after 9-11, and um what ended up happening?
They were saying like death to Israel, death to America, um it's like a venom.
It's point yeah, it's basically like poison, like a very toxic powder substance.
And if you inhale it, it can be deadly.
And they were mailing it out randomly post-9-11.
And I'm gonna get into way more detail on this, by the way, with Ryan Dawson, because anthrax is actually a critical component.
Um, when it comes to 9-11 and you know how um them boys were involved, okay.
False flags, all that other stuff.
But um, but that's basically what it is.
If I'm gonna go give it a nutshell, uh, it's basically a deadly powder slash substance that if you inhale, you pretty much is fatal.
Wow.
Yeah, and this was on the heels right after 9-11.
And when it was first distributed, it was like debt to America, debt to Israel, uh, praise Allah, which obviously made it look like it was Islamic terrorists, but we'll go into more detail about that when we cover 9-11.
Them boys doing some things.
There is a unit uh in uh the FBI that is responsible for rapidly deploying and setting up a command post structure uh to support field operations.
It's much easier to bring those resources from another part of the FBI that has it basically in a box and they show up and set it up.
It really comes together very quickly.
So this is real life footage from the actual command post, guys.
They got it distorted so you can't see the agents' faces.
But uh, yeah, and that's why I like this documentary because you guys are kind of seeing it firsthand from the law enforcement perspective.
And you know, like the video, by the way, guys.
Uh, we got 1.2k likes.
Um, like the video so it gets up in the in the uh in the feed for people, and more people can figure out you know the history of the DC snipers.
There are uh a number of other resources that the FBI brings to bear in a situation like that, including behavioral scientists, which would uh help me in understanding the type of criminal that we're dealing with, maybe familiar with it through silence of the lands.
So scientists provide a profile uh of uh the people likely to be responsible for the killings.
Uh they'll base that on prior um uh shooting incidents, prior serial killers.
In the newly established joint operations center, over 400 local and federal police work round the clock.
The sniper reward fund up on the first day it reached 237,000.
Holy big money to find them boys.
Well, not them boys, but you the snipers, I mean, it doubled in one day after the child was shot.
Police was swamped with close to the hotline.
Over 2,000 a day.
Despite the high number, so a few good leads.
And just so you guys know, 230,000 hours back in 2002 is equivalent in purchasing power to about 385,000 today.
So uh, yeah, it's quite a bit of money.
the community waited helplessly for another killing.
Um a good distance away from that uh Tinoco station.
They're keeping us back, but uh there's a FBI helicopter on third FBI helicopter up the bottom surveying the scene.
We're told that one man is dead.
He was at the pumps at the gas station shot dead at the scene.
Uh no parascine of uh an assailant.
Two days after the boy was shot, the sniper claimed his ninth victim.
Fifty-three-year-old Dean Myers was killed by a single shot to the chest.
Following that murder, Chief Moose and the investigators detected a change in the sniper's pattern.
The killer seemed to be selecting targets that were close to highways, offering quick escape routes.
I love that.
Two days later in Fredericksburg, Virginia, the killer made his most brazen move to date with a police officer standing just 50 yards away.
Wow, here we go.
Kenneth Bridges was shot and killed.
That just tells you how brazen these guys were.
Right with the police right there, still shooting people, and you guys are gonna see how they're able to get away with this for so long and not be caught.
Eyewitnesses gave the police a promising new lead.
Right after the shooting in Fredericksburg, there comes uh two witnesses actually, who see what's described as a white van, and they believe is somehow um related to the shooting.
Each said they saw a white van with a ladder rack on top.
It was Chief Moose's best lead to date.
But motor vehicle records showed over 100,000 white vans registered in the Washington, D.C. area alone.
It had the unfortunate impact of having the media uh conclude that the um people responsible for the shootings were operating those vehicles.
And and despite uh Chief Moose's repeated reminders, uh the media didn't want to take no for an answer on that, and so it constantly was played as these are the vehicles that were uh being used by the snipers.
I think this is how the media being over involved can hurt an investigation.
The impact of that was that when shooting scenes occurred after that, people looked up, and the first white van they saw or the first box truck they saw um consumed their attention, and they may not have seen other vehicles that were in the area.
Speaking of vans, just so you guys understand here, back in 1993 when we had the original World Trade Center bombing.
What was it?
A van involved.
When we had 9-11, there was also suspects caught in vans, which all I'm gonna say, them boys, vans and explosives.
That's all I'm gonna say.
You need to guys, May fucking 5th, to uh May 5th next week.
We are going to go into this in detail.
We drive us.
I don't want to devo Ryan Dawson.
I don't want to divulge too much, but I just think it lets you guys be aware, there was a lot of paranoia when it comes to white white vans in the United States at that period of time because vans were synonymous with terrorist attacks back then.
Okay, guys.
Well, there was a 1993 World Trade Center bombing or the uh 9-11, right?
There were definitely people in vans, include them boys back in 9-11.
And we're gonna talk about this in detail.
Also, McVay as well.
All right, guys.
So go ahead and make sure May 5th, next week.
We're gonna cover cover in details, but yes.
So you can only imagine the 2002 talking about vans, the media had everyone on edge, man.
Paranoia was rampant.
A second weekend passed without a shooting.
The press speculated that the sniper was a family man, only able to kill during the week.
Local people were terrified.
Washington was a city under siege.
Community leaders advise people to avoid wooded areas and use covered parking when shopping.
In the covered car park of a DIY store, A woman and her husband were loading packages into their car.
Linda Franklin was then shot.
The sniper's 11th victim.
That was the FBI analyst that we talked about earlier.
She died at the scene.
Anonymous complaint of a white sevy astro van occupied by a white male.
After that killing, the sniper went eerily quiet.
Five tense days passed without another shooting.
The police were besieged with calls from the public.
Most offered information, but there were also crank callers who claimed to be the sniper.
After nearly a week of silence, the killer decided to contact the police.
Good morning.
Don't say anything.
Just listen.
Where are the people that are causing the killing in your area?
Oh, the police are getting their clue.
Look on the terror card.
It says, call me God.
Do not release the presence.
We have called you three times before.
Trying to cut up negotiations.
And the reason why, guys, they weren't able to respond is because keep in mind, they were they got a hundred thousand leads during the course of this case.
2,000 leads a day.
Okay.
So a lot of them were falling through the cracks.
The police operator didn't realize the significance of the call.
Sir, I need to report you to that Montgomery County Police hotline.
Yes.
We're not investigating the car.
The killer hung up.
L Dispatcher.
Another opportunity to communicate was lost.
The End Saturday, October 19th.
On Saturday morning, Washington again buried its dead.
Vietnam veteran Dean Myers was laid to rest.
Saturday night approached.
Why is that?
Every time we get dispatchers on FedEd, they're fucking retarded and end up getting people get killed, bro.
Yo.
I was about to say that.
Boombook.
Seems like it was going to be a third quiet.
And it's always female dispatchers, too.
Guys, this is why women deserve less.
Book is stores, ninjas.
Okay.
They clearly can't do their goddamn jobs.
Get the book.
Why women deserve less?
Amazon bestseller.
Go ahead.
I had to get a quick plug in there.
Don't forget to like the goddamn video.
Let's keep going with the documentary.
Oh, yeah.
Oh yeah.
Spanish version coming very soon.
Shout out to Angie.
She's translating it right now as we speak.
When do you think we'll be able to get that thing released?
Uh, probably June or mid-June.
Mid-June?
Okay.
Al Angie's.
We're supposed to get it May 1st.
Well, again.
This is why women deserve less.
June first.
Book is stores.
Even Angie.
You're crazy.
You said you first.
Alright.
Guys, yeah, book is gonna come out in Spanish as well, man.
Shout out to Angie for helping me with that.
She's gonna translate it for you guys.
Um, she's making sure that she has uh the Spanish on point.
She's translating some of my terms, etc.
Yeah, it's kind of difficult because Myron's it's got a lot of slang.
So book is source cover in English, Amazon Bestella, get it now, and it's gonna be out in Spanish, probably hopefully within a month or so.
Weekend for Moose and his team.
but then breaking news a shooting in ashland virginia this breaking story Not known yet whether this is connected to the sniper investigation.
There are also reports that police are looking for a white icon a line band with a ladder rat.
don't need you For the first time, the sniper had attacked on a weekend.
In the small town of Ashland, Virginia, 80 miles south of Washington, DC.
The killer had shot his 12th.
Now that is military.
Yeah, that's the one.
That's military right there.
They were getting back into the car.
He was shot in the in the stomach.
He's apparently gonna make it.
He's in uh stable but serious condition, still in surgery.
Uh, they think it may have been from the woods.
Okay, thank you.
Do that.
Hamrock 105, heavy to hell, maintain, do it though.
Has the determination been made whether this is the sniper that's been in the Washington DC metro area, or is it not?
Guys, 2700 plus you guys watching, 2800 if we include the Twitch ninjas.
Guys, like the video.
We should be at 2,000 likes.
Easy.
I only see 1.4k likes.
Guys, like the video.
Subscribe to the channel if you haven't already.
Share this video with a friend that likes true crime.
All right, you guys are not going to get insight and details broken down to this level anywhere else on the internet because to my knowledge, actually, I've never seen another YouTuber that was former uh federal agent that actually did case elements.
A lot of these people that you know used to be feds, whatever, they've never done actual investigations.
I've testified hundreds of times.
I've written hundreds of criminal complaints, I've ran hundreds of search warrants.
I know what the fuck I'm talking about when it comes to this stuff.
When it comes to being arrogant about one thing, this field, this uh this discipline, this is one thing I am arrogant about because I actually was out here doing these types of cases, man.
So like the video, subscribe to the channel if you haven't already, and uh let's get to 2,000 likes, all right.
No, there is no evidence right now to conclude that everyone is a potential witness that was here at the time.
So we're going through and not putting blinders and interviewing as many hip hop people as possible.
Is there anything on the white van that was stopped in Stafford County about 11 tonight?
That was uh state police stopped that van, I believe, in Stafford County.
I do not have any further information from that.
The biggest thing we're waiting for right now is daylight.
What's the status on 95?
I'm looking for a new library.
The sniper expressed his contempt for Chief Moose and his investigators behind the Ponderosa, police found a letter pinned to a tree.
Handwritten in a childish scroll.
The sniper again boasted, I am God.
Alright, so now again, you know, taking a page out of the Zodiac killer and the BTK killer.
He's writing taunting notes to the police.
Anytime you do this, guys, not only are you going to get the police more inclined to catch you, but it's going to create a media spectacle.
So this thing was all over the place, man.
He blamed five of the last shootings on police, the price paid for not responding to his phone calls.
I'm committing these crimes because you're not listening to my phone calls.
It's saying that he's actually reached out several times and he's not been able to communicate with the police the way he'd hoped or the way he wanted, basically referring to the police as incompetent.
In the letter, he had demanded $10 million.
dollars.
He also told police he would contact them at 6 a.m.
Sunday morning on a telephone number in Virginia.
Unfortunately, the letter could not be opened until forensics were completed.
By then the sniper's deadline had passed.
Also, keep in mind, guys, they didn't have the capacity, the technology to do uh quick turnaround forensic analysis like they do now.
It's 2002, man.
Like, bro, people barely even had cell phones.
The letter was opened after that time, so that opportunity was missed.
To the person who left us a message at the Ponderosa last night.
You gave us a telephone number.
We do want to talk to you.
Call us at the number you provide.
Following the Saturday shooting, the killer again telephoned the police.
The call is traced to a payphone in Virginia.
The authorities staked out the area and surrounded a white van.
The media reported it all live on national television.
Mayor Doug Duncan, once again, getting in the middle of the investigation.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I I we got all that.
We just we just haven't confirmed.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
See, look at the case.
Those are the phones that they had back then.
Where are they names?
What's the name of these phones?
I don't even know what that is.
That's like a piece of crap.
Fucking uh maybe uh what were the phones back then?
They're flipped phones.
They used to call it it was like singular back then.
They didn't even call it ATT.
I think it was called singular back then, man.
So yeah, I'll hold it up.
You guys know what I'm talking about, man.
A sprint flip, maybe yeah, sprint, maybe.
Yo, L phone right there, man.
We were at heads.
They had the Nokia's back in the day.
Uh till a few minutes ago, and then uh Doug went to see the chief, so you know, and didn't you have Moose's called a press conference for anyone said that was a razor?
Definitely not a razor, bro.
That was my first thing.
I remember razors used to be like the cool phones back then.
Man, this is bringing back.
I remember that was my first phone.
That flip phone what's up.
He stormed the white van.
There were two men inside.
They were illegal immigrants with no connection to the sniper shootings.
He sees this.
Wamp womp.
Catch two Mexicans.
Get what the hell's going on here?
This is just gonna really piss him off.
Tell him that number one, we you know, we messed up as the police.
Number two, we didn't follow orders, we're not doing what we're supposed to do.
You know, in it on all these thoughts about what could be going through his head at this time if he's seeing what we're seeing, and uh, we were pretty sure that he probably was um and how he would react.
At dawn on Tuesday, October 22nd, after 18 days of shootings away from Montgomery County, the sniper came back.
A local bus driver was preparing for everyone was involved, guys.
You see how many agencies you got secret service, ATF, FBI, local police, everyone and their mom was involved in this investigation.
Man, guys, also I'm looking.
1.5k likes.
We need 2,000.
Get us a 2,000 likes, god damn it.
For his morning route when he was shot in the doorway of his vehicle.
uh we're just waiting to hear from the hospital Um, and he died.
Okay.
Following two hours of surgery, Conrad Johnson, the killer's 13th victim, had died.
The killer had returned to taunt Moose and his investigators on their home turf.
It was uh in in some respects uh uh reassuring when that shooting took place back in that the area that we were really saturating uh with investigative resources.
So um certainly not reassuring by any means from the standpoint of a loss of life, but uh that particular scene to me was somebody who was familiar with that territory.
I I uh spent a lot of time at that scene, and it's it's off the beaten path.
It's not by major interstate, so uh that's that scene kind of talked to me more than other scenes did at the bus scene.
Police found another letter from the sniper.
It mocked their inability to catch him.
That's Now he's messing with them.
He's leaving letters taunting them, tell them that they're incompetent, that they're you know stupid.
Same afternoon, rumors were spreading that the killer had told police he planned to target children again.
The media tell Chief Moose they're going to run with this story.
The chief had a tough decision to make.
Keep the contents of the letter secure and obey the killer's instruction not to release to the press or reveal its true threat to prevent a press in Jesus' public hysteria.
Bro, holy that is a tough decision to make.
you're between a rock and a hard place.
Your children are not safe anywhere at any time.
We feel it's important to provide this information to the public.
I remember standing there with him and he just was there.
That was the hardest thing I had to do.
It was a devastating thing to have to do.
And it left us, it left us feeling terrible.
Hey, sweetie.
Did you hear what he said?
At the end of the press conference, they read a statement, and the chief said that the guy said P uh P.S. Your children are not safe anywhere at any time.
Just keep them in the keep him in the backyard.
Don't let them ride their bikes or anything.
I mean, we'll send them to school, but I'll take them to school.
That's the kind of stuff that really pisses you off as a parent.
I want to know that stuff when it happens.
I don't want to be told about it three days later.
And they still don't have a damn shred of information that he hasn't provided.
Not one witness.
Not one witness.
The hunt for the Washington sniper was now the biggest story in the world.
For three weeks, the killer had evaded captured by Chief Moose's thousand strong sniper investigation force.
The 1400 journalists monitoring the case outnumbered the police.
And they're in 1400 journalists, thousand law enforcement officers working on this investigation, guys.
Wild.
Wild, wild, wild.
If you were alive at this time, you guys already know how ridiculous this was back then.
Sometimes I'd be wondering like, imagine if a case like this happened in today's day and age with the social media, it would be everywhere.
TikTok, Snapchat, YouTube, it would be everywhere, man.
Some of these investigations.
The DC Sniper case, OJ Simpson, um, even a Boston Marathon bombing.
It was big back then, but it would have been even bigger if social media had the same prevalence that it does today.
Like, guys, unprecedented news coverage.
Yeah, most of the time.
9-11, if that happened in the social media age, craziness, man.
Most of these news in America become international pretty quickly.
Yep.
Absolutely.
We hear about that.
I mean so that's all I not to, you know, whatever.
Unfortunately, there have been development in the case that we need to really focus on right now.
And we are not going to be holding a press conference.
If there are developments that occur in the next few hours or overnight, that we can call you to get guys, we're only at 1.6k likes, man.
We need another 400 to hit 1000, 2,000.
There's 2700 of y'all watching right now on YouTube alone.
Uh, and then another 100 plus y'all.
We're almost at 3K altogether between YouTube and Twitch.
If you're watching on Twitch, open up a tab on YouTube.
Go ahead and hit that smash button, smash that like button.
That's the only thing I asked, guys.
Hit the like button, stop being fucking ninja watchers there, sitting in silence with a mask on, like a weirdo.
Like the video.
That's the only thing I asked.
You don't got to donate a dollar to the stream.
Just like the video.
But thank you.
You talked to having crap coverage before.
But she said unfortunately we've had a development in the case, so I'm not quite sure what that means.
Who knows?
He could have called, he could have not called.
They got a tip.
Nobody knows.
There's been something has happened just now.
Something took them off.
They're supposed to have this brief thing.
Now they say we've got developments that have caused us to go down different avenues with the investigation.
Hey, Denis, here.
All right, guys, just so you know, give give you guys a little uh thing here.
What this is especially what from the law enforcement perspective.
Typically, when law enforcement does a press conference, they do it to give information to the public.
So that it kind of kind of relieves stress and kind of familiarize them with what's going on going on without giving them too much information to hurt the investigation.
Anytime they have a press conference and they cancel it, the media knows right then and there they just got into the development.
They don't want to alert what's going on.
Let's go ahead and dig and try to figure out what they just got.
Did they get a search warrant?
Did they get someone in custody?
It makes the media go crazy anytime they have a press conference scheduled, and they end up not doing it.
This ended up happening with the Boston Marathon bombers.
They had a press conference um uh scheduled, but then they got the pictures and identified who these guys were.
At the time they didn't know who what their names were, but they had pictures of them dropping the backpacks by the finish line.
So that made the media speculate as to what was going on, and they ended up getting a leak of the pictures of the individuals involved.
It wanted up happening was they went ahead and wanted to leak the picture, so that put the FBI and the Boston Police Department Commissioner and the AUSA in a very tough position.
And they had to this they had to do a press conference uh and release the photos to hey, we need help identifying them because the news is gonna do it first.
So that's a quick little uh tidbit there that most people don't know.
But yes, anytime there's a media um coverage event scheduled and it gets canceled by the police, the media knows right then and there.
They got some new information, they're following up on it.
Let's go ahead and pry and see what they're doing.
Listen, who do you know has been talking about this?
I got I gotta uh like the video.
You ain't gonna get sauced like that nowhere else, goddammit.
Smash that like button.
Two thousand likes are bust.
There was a major pause breakthrough.
In communications, the killer bragged he was responsible for a September shooting in Alabama.
It was his first mistake.
Here we go.
This is the beginning.
So he goes ahead and brags that he was responsible for a shooting in Alabama, mobile to be exact, if I'm not mistaken, the mobile area.
The fingerprint was taken from the scene and put through the federal database.
It gave police a name.
Bam.
And just so you guys know, real quick, going back to the web the FBI website, right?
So the investigators soon learned that a crime similar to the one described in the call had indeed taken place, and that a fingerprint ballistic evidence were available from the case.
An agent from our mobile uh office gathered that evidence and quickly flew to Washington, DC, arriving on Monday, uh Monday evening, October 21st, while ATF Howled handled the ballistic evidence.
We took the important uh we took the fingerprint evidence to the FBI laboratory.
So the agent from mobile literally hand delivered it to make sure that it would get done immediately.
Okay.
And the following morning, our fingerprint database produced a match, a magazine dropped at the crime scene, bore the fingerprint of Lee Boyd Malville from a previous arrest in Washington State.
Okay, and uh, and it was this guy, the younger guy, okay.
This dude.
He was 17.
He was 17 at the time.
So that was the first fuck up.
Damn.
But let's see what ended up happening, guys, in Washington, DC.
Uh, excuse me, in Washington State.
Well, Mobile Alabama and the connection to Washington.
We identified uh a person that we felt may have played a role in that crime in Alabama.
Uh, that led us out to uh Tacoma, Washington.
And you guys are gonna see how the press once again sticks their nose into the situation and hurts the investigation.
And it led us to some interviews there that um prompted a search of a residence in a garden, 3,000 miles from Montgomery County.
The ATF removed a bullet ridden tree stone.
The police now have their strongest lead to date.
Unfortunately, the media was jeopardizing Moose's investigation, broadcasting live images of the search.
Look at that.
Breaking news, Seattle FBI, live news of them doing the search.
So could you imagine?
Like they're doing the search right then and there, but they probably got a Search warrant and you got the press covering it real time, bro.
Talk about a pain in the ass of the investigation, man.
Could be either brass shell casings or lead slugs, which police could then try to match with the brass and the lead that they've got from back here from the DC area sniper shootings and killing the entire situation that happened in Tacoma, Washington with a tree stump.
It was supposed to be something as simple as just going quietly to recover a tree stump.
And it turned into what I would term a media circus.
And if the sniper had been watching television that night, could have been gone.
My understanding is this house is someplace that the this guy may have lived in the past.
That's my understanding.
And that's that he somehow they were getting the information before we were getting the information.
Um it was unfolding in Washington.
They were doing their own investigative reporting.
It was coming out before we even had it.
We're getting a license place.
So you got them like, guys, keep in mind, they're doing this investigation over in Tacoma, Washington, doing the searches, and the press is getting the information before the lead agency, Montgomery uh Sheriff's Office is getting the information.
That tells you guys how bad the media leaks were, man.
Really getting in the way of the investigation.
And before we continue, let me go ahead.
We'll do a quick little super chat break here.
Um, because they're piling up.
Deisha Cole goes, I was watching the Boston Marathon at site of the bombing at 218 p.m.
I received a text from a running club teammate to meet up at the mile 23 mark.
That text message saved my life.
Wow.
Crazy, bro.
Shout out to you, my friend.
Glad you're here with us to tell the story.
I was born in Montgomery County where this happened.
I was six at the time, and I remember my father moving us to joint Andrews base to avoid outdoors.
Yeah, man, it was a wild time.
Keon goes, love to show I'm from Guam, currently a truck driver and looking to buy my own truck and get into real estate as well as gonna go back to college.
What degree would you recommend?
That'll help.
Get a degree, guys.
I'm a proponent of college if it's gonna get you a job.
So whether it's something in STEM, uh, right, or uh maybe something in medicine that's gonna get you a job.
Make sure you get a degree that will get you a job.
That's my only thing.
All right, or you could go into a trade as well.
Uh Angie, I might need your help with this.
What is that?
Um, this is by Spanish, but it says basically that these guys look like your cousins.
Oh, fantastic.
I appreciate that, my friend.
Hello, my board!
Okay.
Uh, we got here uh 303 uh gurrito goes, can you do uh the Draco the Ruler story?
TLR has a documentary.
Yes, I can.
I'll also do a King Vaughn one as well from uh he's talking about yeah, he's talking about our our boy Trap Lord Ross.
Uh Breland Jefferson, y'all go go and do James Holmes Case Dark Knight if we get time.
Uh Jeremy goes, Thank you for bringing us fire content.
Have you thought about doing a firearms training video or stream?
Maybe do it at a gun range.
I have thought about that, actually.
That wouldn't be a bad idea.
Teach you guys how to shoot a gun properly.
I wouldn't go to shooting range.
Uh you can't shoot because you're uh a four national.
Uh what?
I'm just kidding.
We'll we'll we'll uh we'll plan something out for you guys.
Don't worry.
Uh Franklin goes, I used to live very close to some of the shootings.
I remember parents were scared to let children go to school.
My family in Nigeria even called to make sure we were all right.
Yeah, man.
That was crazy time, bro.
National coverage.
This is uh international coverage.
This is gonna help with my criminology career.
I actually take notes on these live streams.
Okay, hey bro, this is something, man.
Don't welcome for that one.
A lot of insight.
Uh Brian uh Inf Edge goes, good old fed it to keep uh to help cope the L Knicks took.
Okay, yeah, yeah.
That was big today.
The Knicks suck.
Uh this boys goes, them boys are crazier than us boys.
Okay, I appreciate that, them boys.
Martin, when you're going to do the Wake Code Takes a shootout with David Koresh, that was huge.
FBI and ATF was involved.
Yes, it was.
We will cover that as well.
I'll probably do it after the mafia.
Um, speaking of which, I also, after the mafia got planned, we're gonna do Dave Corresh and the Waco Siege.
We're gonna do the gold estate killer.
Um, and yeah, what else?
Uh, probably other a couple other serial killers as well.
The torso killer, Ed Kemper, yes, yep.
And who's the Canadian one that they've been asking for?
Robert Picton.
There we go.
We'll cover that as well for y'all and Aaron Hernandez.
But that's all gonna come after the mafia, guys.
Um, Love the podcast.
This is from Rajflower.
Do you guys broadcast after our show in 1080p or 4K?
Because my settings on my computer say 1080k have a 4K computer.
We shoot it at 1080 at 1080, guys.
Did someone say food and that eat then decline?
You guys are fucking hilarious.
So Colin Parker goes, like the damn video, Myron.
Appreciate the work on breaking down these cases.
Also, it's nice to see you on a channel where your hair follicles aren't following out.
Yes, I appreciate that, guys.
And the hair is coming back.
The games are coming back soon.
Yeah, it's it grows back because of Feddy.
Um speaking of which, but it isn't gonna grow back because you guys don't like the video fast enough.
We got 1.8k likes to my knowledge right now, right?
Let me refresh the page.
We should be at 2,000 guys.
Easy.
All right.
Uh what do I?
Yeah, 1.8 1.8k, guys.
Yo, 200 more likes.
Let's get this thing to 2,000, right?
Uh, and then we got here Brian and Fledge.
Who would have thought that Fresh is a time traveler?
Yep, fresh apparently was the sheriff of Montgomery County.
By the way, Mark, Mark, call it Audi Alabia.
Yeah, Audi Alabia.
Okay, that rhymes us.
Yeah, all right, Audiolabia.
Uh, Angie is wise for an adult teenager female.
Don't let her looks fool, you guys.
She's 26.
She old.
Um 25.
Uh, or uh 25?
Mm-hmm.
Okay.
Well, she's still old.
Uh, if if I was uh Leonardo DiCaprio, I'd be breaking up with her right about now.
Uh, you should cover the shooting that happened yesterday in Texas 5 dead shooter that's still being looked for.
Uh okay, I could uh write that.
Can you write that down real quick, Angie?
Because that's what's the name of it?
Uh we they don't know.
They said apparently five people killed in Texas.
Uh oh, yeah, I read about that.
Um, have you done uh the cult killings and done in Matamoros?
They killed UT student Mark Kilroy.
They were uh cartel led by Sarah L. Durete and Aldofo Constanzo.
That has not come up.
We haven't done that one.
Brian Infledge, where's Officer Fresh to save the day?
Uh he ain't in this one.
Remember the white van's also the vehicle of choice for pedos.
Fair enough.
Who deserve less than women?
Them boys deserve less.
Uh, shout out to Zina in the house, uh, showing her classic of love for them boys.
Uh Killer Can on a previous feta episode.
You mentioned a documentary for us to watch on Rumble to prepare for your stream of white Ryan Dawson.
What was it?
Numek, my friends, N-U-M-E-C.
Okay, New Mek N-U-M-E-C.
Okay, if you guys it wasn't like dancing with the unique.
Yeah, that that that doesn't incorporate them, but it does talk about them boys and how they're evolved.
The JFK and stealing some uh nuclear secrets.
Zena the Witch goes, Nokia the flip phone.
I know phones.
Wink wink.
We know that one because you are former scammer.
Shout out to Zena.
Uh FBI, open up, hit my drop.
FBI open up.
I appreciate that.
FBI.
We got you.
And then we got Homeland Security Investigations in the house.
W Myron, you know we how we get stuff done.
Chris is a bum.
Shout out to y'all.
My former agency in the house.
Appreciate y'all are watching.
Uh media, most effective devil in America.
I like that one, IRS.
Um, and then we got uh Blink Dark Mellow.
Like this video, everyone.
Let's get it past 2K.
Love you, Myra Gates.
You are my hero.
Thank you for thank you so much for the content you provide us with.
I got y'all, man.
Trying to give you guys that edutainment.
Well, we got almost 2900 you guys watching all together, man.
Uh on YouTube and on Twitch.
You said Andrew Tab.
What was that?
You said Andrew Tatum.
No, no, no, Eddie Tatman.
Okay.
Carlos Mazrat, uh, super sticker, 20 bucks.
I appreciate that.
Uh crypto slim goes, can you do a video on the booby boys and John Doe from Miami?
Never heard of that.
Oh, speaking of which, by the way, real quick, guys, the crypto course is still open.
Get in there, guys.
Um, I think they're gonna close it either tonight or tomorrow.
Um, but they're gonna start here very soon, man.
Guys, I got a six-figure portfolio on cryptocurrency, thanks to them.
Uh, so go ahead and get in there.
I'll drop a link for it as well in the chat for y'all.
Um, Umar Yasin goes, Asalam alaykum, bro.
Uh, thanks for the work you do.
I can't entirely agree with some of your outlook on dating, which I'll ask during FNF show.
On a side note, have we sponsored the FNF show?
Uh, I mean, yo, just like the video, man, subscribe, man.
Uh, we're you know, like I said, if you guys donate, that's great.
Yeah, but you guys don't have to donate a dollar to any of these streams, man.
I genuinely just appreciate that you guys are watching, supporting, sharing it with a friend, and uh helping the channel grow.
You know, I value that immensely, and I value your guys' support immensely.
So don't forget to like the video, subscribe to all the channels, whether it's uh fresh and fit, fresh clips, more fresh fit clips, uh freshman CEO, uh Fed 1811.
Those are channels that we run.
So I appreciate you guys showing love and rocking with us.
Um all right, let's get back to the documentary.
Guys, uh, I see that we're only at 1.9k likes again.
We should easily be at 2,000 plus.
So like the video, man.
Let's get back.
On uh uh on a vehicle.
And uh are you hearing about New Jersey?
Without waiting for police confirmation, the press named the sniper suspect.
Mike and Jane, this is fast break, but we can put up on the screen.
Anyway, shout out to all the mods in the chat, by the way.
Um, you know, whether it's the IRS, Homeland Security Investigations, or FBI, all you guys got mod uh wrenches now.
Um, Zina in the house, all you guys are helping out with modding the chat and everything else like that.
Thank you guys so much.
I appreciate that.
You guys helped the show run nice and efficiently.
Um, and on this channel, guys, we don't really uh restrict y'all as much because you know it's it's funny the shit that y'all post in here.
So um, you know, just try to keep try try to not you know violate the hate speech guidelines.
But other than that, man, love the chat.
Love you guys, it's always entertaining to read the chat.
Y'all be having Angie dying in the back a lot of the time.
So you guys see her laughing nine out of ten times it's uh what you guys say in the chat.
So um, shout out to y'all like the videos.
Uh support the channel and shout out to the chat and the mods.
Tonight, the names of the two men, not one, but two men they want as quote persons of interest in the sniper.
Yeah, John Alan Williams Lee Malvin.
John Allen Alan Williams is yo, that is crazy.
The media knew who these guys were before the police the stepfather of Lee Malvo.
They are both black males, one about 40 years of age, the other one's said to be about 20 years of age.
In addition, there's now a firm vehicle alert, no box truck, no Chevy Astro, no white vehicle at all.
Instead, a dark 1990 Chevrolet Capri's car.
N D A 21Z.
Nancy David Alpha 21Z.
Police are asking anybody who sees that vehicle to call 911 immediately.
Vic Denise.
Authorities want to make sure that they've got all of their y'all are hilarious, bro.
All right, we need you back, homeland screen investigations.
And then FBI goes, we took an L there.
FBI, open up.
Yo, you guys are fucking hilarious, man.
W mods in the chat, man.
Wow.
I've dotted and their T's crossed before they step in front of that podium because they are very well aware that their audience is not just the public, but also the person or persons believed to be responsible for the string of killings that have left 10 people dead and three others wounded, dating back to October 2nd.
Police confirmation of the names came one hour after the you know what it'll be hilarious if y'all, which by the way, like the video.
Yo, it'll be hilarious if you guys like made uh names for like ATF, uh fucking um secret service.
Obviously, we got IRS FBI and HSI already.
Um, but it would be hilarious if y'all started making like and uh commenting on this it'd just be fucking funny.
So uh go ahead if anybody wants to do it.
I'll mod you up.
Uh just don't just make sure that you actually, you know, you're not a pain in the ass as a mod.
The media had released them.
A federal arrest warrant has been issued.
Yeah, DEA, etc.
for John Allen Mohammed, also known as John Allen Williams.
He should be considered armed and dangerous.
He may be in the company of a juvenile.
The police released an image of one of the men they were looking for.
Which, by the way, just so you guys know, they ended up issuing an arrest warrant for uh Muhammad, right?
So what happened was they um uh so they work with ATF, right?
And they revealed that Muhammad had a Bushmaster 223 rifle in his possession, a federal violation since he had been served with a restraining order to stay away from his ex-wife.
That enabled us to charge him with federal weapons violations, and with Malvo clearly connected, the FBI and ATF jointly obtained a federal material witness warrant for him.
The legal papers were now in our hands.
So just so you guys know.
So keep in mind, they identified, right?
Malvo from the shooting out there in uh the crime that happened in Mobile, Alabama, and then they're able to tie him to Mohammed, right?
AKA John William, uh John Alan Williams, formerly known formerly his original name, and then which ended up becoming John Allen Mohammed, And then they found out that he had purchased a Bushmaster 223 rifle.
And when you guys have when you have a restraining order against you guys, you cannot have a firearm, okay?
You become a prohibited person.
It's the equivalent to having a gun as a felon or an illegal alien, etc.
So they were able to go ahead and charge him with a federal weapons violations.
Now, why is that important?
Well, it allows them to go ahead and get an arrest warrant, and once you have an arrest warrant for someone, it's uh you can put more resources into finding him.
And now that you have an arrest warrant from you, you can actually arrest them once you pick him up, right?
And on top of that, they went ahead and got a material witness uh warrant for him.
So I've done several material witness warrants, guys, in the past, and a material witness is someone that you can basically arrest, right?
And or uh detain them because they are the witness in a uh federal investigation and they need to be brought in uh because they have some kind of critical testimony to provide to the case.
I used to do this often when I was an agent where if you caught a smuggler with like let's say 10 illegal aliens, you needed those aliens to testify against the individual, and they wouldn't have Fifth Amendment privileges because they weren't being charged for a crime.
So you would hold them under material witness warrant so that they can be in the judicial system.
Why would you do that?
Well, because otherwise they would need to be deported.
So the material witness affidavit that you file gets you in a material witness warrant, and then you're able to hold those individuals for the court.
So this was very smart by the FBI.
There's a chess move where they get the arrest warrant for Muhammad because they know he's uh uh he has the firearms violations because he shouldn't have a gun now that he has a restraining order against him.
And then, since they were able to effectively tie him to Malvo, they get a material witness affidavit uh warrant for Malvo because they didn't have charges on him at the time.
Okay.
So that was a strategy that the FBI employed at the time to get these guys in custody.
And remember, guys, half the job is just getting him in custody, so it gives you time to go ahead and form and file formal charges against them later on.
Like the video, by the way.
You ain't gonna get sauced like that nowhere else.
God damn it.
Dom DeMarco.
Dom DeMarco.
Okay, got it.
That's a picture that they released to the mat to the mass media.
I hope the guy, this is it, though, you know.
I hope the guys too many people didn't die, too many kids are scared, you know.
My little girl last night when she prayed, she's you know, she thanked God and thankful mother and father, and she said, Lord, please get this night.
Well, there's still a lot to cover in this story.
I mean, there's a lot going on.
God only knows what's gonna happen next.
In the end game, you can't predict it.
what's so wild about this for 22 days people were fixated on a white van Now the search was on for Doc Chevrolet Caprice car, the man with New Jersey plates, right?
Is seen right here, guys, with the beltway snipers.
Meanwhile, October 22nd, we searched our criminal records database and found that Muhammad had registered a blue shavvy caprice with the license plate of NDA 21Z in New Jersey.
That description was given to the news media and shared far and wide.
So this is one time where the media can actually do something to help the case versus hurt the case.
But every now and then you just need a little bit of luck.
And maybe our luck was that they weren't.
And this is where the media can help.
Once you actually have the individuals identified for real and you have their personal identifiers and or their vehicle, then you go ahead and put it out to the media so that you can help so you got more eyes out there looking for these guys.
Watching television that night.
As a result of what we found in Tacoma, Washington, uh, and of uh of identifying uh those two people by name.
And this is also the importance, guys, of having federal partners involved.
They were able to go ahead and simultaneously conduct the search over the in Tacoma, Washington, a whole other jurisdiction, right, to assist the Montgomery police who don't have the authority to conduct a law enforcement action in another state.
This is where the feds come in handy.
We did some record checks in our databases and found.
Hey, shout out to ATF in the house.
Montgomery County area during the time the shooting's occurred.
We got ATF in the house.
Like the video.
Yeah, like the goddamn video.
Dom Demonko.
Oh, man, we got the feds in the house now, man.
There was a uh phone call from a uh civilian uh truck driver who was an arrest stop near Frederick, Maryland, who had heard the uh license tag.
We also have them boys here and then we got the DA in the house as well.
Shout out to y'all.
Dom Demonco.
Oh my god, bro.
This is hilarious.
I know y'all were gonna do it right away.
Then we got CIA in the house as well.
Domonko, all these guys.
Oh, even the police of Federal Ministeria is in the fucking house.
Dom Domonco.
Yo, number one chat, man.
Y'all are hilarious, bro.
He goes in and says, Okay.
Yo, what the fuck, man?
The Maryland State Police then took up that responsibility and blocked off the entrance.
I immediately um uh got in my car and headed towards Frederick, and I actually pulled out on the interstate directly behind the hostage rescue team that was en route to that location.
And just so you guys know, HRT uh hostage rescue team is FBI's elite um uh extraction crew.
Basically, they're they're send the most the most high risk stuff.
They're probably the most elite SWAT team in the United States that's still law enforcement outside of the military.
They're trained specifically by SEALs, uh, really good at what they do.
The FBI agents that are in the H uh S uh HRT do that full time.
They they're just sinequanico and they train all day.
They're FBI agents, right?
1811s, but they don't carry any cases, and they train 24-7 and they're deployed all over the country uh for any type of crazy situation like this.
Uh I selected the so funny, Edgy.
But uh just they're just them going crazy in the chat.
The FBI's hostage rescue team, which is an elite team that is rarely used to be a team that would make the assault.
I authorized him to go forward and implement the plan.
I traveled forward to deploy the first team, then the second team.
A hundred officers surrounded the car, they smashed out the windows and took the sleeping suspects at gunpoint.
They were there asleep.
Imagine being wanted all over the like literally like the most wanted people in the world, and you're like, ah, you know what, bruh?
No, we will watch the news everything, and they just mentioned our names, but let's go to sleep.
Like, bro, L. And everyone knew the car.
Yeah, and everybody knew the car, too.
Like, why didn't y'all get the fuck out of the car?
Stupid.
The subjects were removed from the vehicle and secured.
Uh they were handcuffed and separated and um uh and cared for yeah, cared for the cow.
Finally, after 22 days of murder in Mayhem, Chief Moose and his investigators had the prime sniper suspects in custody.
41-year-old John Mohammed and 17-year-old Lee Malvo are not related.
They met when Mohammed briefly dated Malvo's mother.
Mohammed, a Gulf War veteran, received no sniper training, but earned the army's expert marksmanship badge.
Oh, translation.
Yo, miss the sniper's car had been modified to allow them to shoot unseen from within.
After capture, the press reported the killer's car had been stopped several times during the investigation.
Oh, man.
Oh, man.
Bye.
you Amen.
Yo, what the fuck, bro?
United States Marshal Service in the house.
Yo, what the fuck, bro?
What Man said he's tired, too tired of uh saying it court.
And we also got the Department of Justice in the house as well, man.
Shout out to them.
Make sure to like the video too.
Yeah, like the video, Department of Justice.
Shout out to y'all.
Hit the hit the like button.
Well, we got Secret Service in the house, too.
Hit the like button before I expose you.
I appreciate that, my friend.
You guys are hilarious.
Dom Domco.
There have been questions asked about a Chevy Caprice that was seen in the area of the Washington, DC shooting, and why we didn't put out information about that vehicle.
And I think the the best reason for that is that we didn't have multiple witnesses seeing that vehicle in the area, and it wasn't a sus a suspicious vehicle in that area.
At least not to the point that we had a good enough description that we could get it out to the public and narrow down the field of of um of vehicles that we were looking for.
And as a matter of fact, the witness had the color wrong on it as well.
Um, you know, in retrospect, knowing what we know now, it might have been helpful to put out that there was a Chevy Caprice in the area.
after 13 shootings the media waited for chief moose to confirm that the sniper was off the streets No black weapon.
Yeah.
Ladies and gentlemen, please stand by.
Sorry to keep everyone waiting tonight.
The search of the vehicle is seeked today yielded a weapon, which is a Bushmaster XM-15 223 caliber rifle, which was sent to the ATF lab in Rockville for analysis.
The results of forensic testing are that the weapons cease from the vehicle occupied by Muhammad has been forensically determined to be the murder weapon in the shootings.
Residents of Montgomery County, the Washington region, and indeed our entire nation, a profound thanks and deep appreciation to Montgomery County Police Chief Charles Moose.
ATF special agent in charge, Mike Bouchard, FBI special agent in charge, Gary Ball.
Yeah, there we go.
So I knew I knew it.
So these guys weren't actual case agents.
These guys that you guys saw that were talking about talking in the documentary, were the special agents in charge.
So just so you guys understand, the way it works is, and I broke it down as this in other situations, but the special agent in charge, also known as the SAC or the SAIC as the FBI calls it, is the top guy in that agency, and he's the one and I knew that as soon as he said, Oh, yeah, I deployed the HRT.
Uh that pretty much tells me he's gonna be the top guy.
They're not the actual case agent.
The case agent is uh the special agent who basically runs the case, and then above him you got a supervisor, then above him you got assistant special agent in charge, then above him you got the special agent in charge.
And the manager's job is to get the case agent everything they need to make the you know to make the case happen.
And then obviously the ATF was involved as well.
So uh they're the equivalent to like, let's say, a sheriff or you know, a police chief, they're the top brass in that agency in that local jurisdiction.
All of them you can see yourself standing there, but on the other hand wouldn't hurt my feelings if I wake up one morning and couldn't remember anything about it.
i wouldn't mind forgetting it I will always wish we would have found them sooner because when you think about our victims and think about their families, we could have saved some of that pain.
Since his arrest, Lee Malvo has told police that all the shootings were carried out jointly, and he pulled the trigger on the boy.
Allegedly, it is Malvo's writing in the letters, voice on the police tapes, and print found on the murder weapon.
John Mohammed's ex-wife claims the shootings were a cover to kill her so he could reclaim his children.
Both men are now awaiting separate trials in Virginia.
They face death by lethal injection.
If found guilty of the crimes.
This documentary came out a while ago, as you guys can see, but it's fresh because you you can see the actual law enforcement officers that were involved, which is why I liked it.
But we come to Ken to find out later on, as you guys know, that um Mohammed, John Muhammad, basically was uh um killed on I think November 10th, they said by lethal injection.
Yes, November 10th, 2009, uh in Greensville Correctional Center uh in Jarrett, Virginia.
So, guys, that is a documentary right there, man.
I really hope you guys enjoyed that.
Um, oh, real quick.
I wanted to show y'all.
They didn't cover that much of the motive of everything.
Oh, yeah, the motive.
So basically the motive, guys, was they were trying to um here.
Let me what was the motion?
Well, from what I read, uh, yeah, here on in on Wikipedia.
Here, go ahead.
Muhammad wanted to kill his second wife.
Right, and he wanted to cover up, like doing the killings around the area where she lived.
And then what the other guy was just a terrorist.
Like he was like, Yeah, he um, from what I read, it's like he wrote like some some stuff.
Um, insinuating that he wanted to do like a jihad.
A jihad against the United States.
Yeah.
And and they and they also had some other crazy cookemania plans, like they wanted to create terror and have the kids.
Yeah, they wanted to kill raise, they wanted to take over the country and have the kids raised to be terrorists.
Like a lot of these guys aren't logically.
A lot of the time stupid.
Yeah, they wanted to make like camps for kids to to be like killers, terrorists, and also they wanted to kill like pregnant women.
They wanted to like the aim was like to kill pregnant women and six white males or six white people every every day.
That was their their aim.
But the thing is that yeah, it it got uh I don't know how to say it, but they couldn't do it, basically.
L terrorists, man, they didn't even have like a focus goal.
Like, come on, man.
Like at least a lot of like I death to America.
We're gonna do this because y'all have forward policy in the Middle East that we don't like, and them boys are on the team, and y'all invaded Palestine.
Like they had reasons, right?
But these guys are just kind of all over the place.
Like, uh, we're just gonna start sniping people randomly.
You know what I mean?
Like, uh, we just want people to hate America.
Like not focused at all, man.
L terrorists.
You have some in Oh my god, they just made ice.
Yeah, yeah.
Uh okay, so guys, real quick, I'm gonna show you how uh the setup with the caprice real fast.
How how they had a setup and how they were able to get away with this for a while.
Kind of uh interesting situation.
Um, and I'll show you some actually.
No, let me show you some crime scene photos of the caprice.
Here's the vehicle right here.
Uh let me enlarge it for y'all real fast.
Hey guys, give me a favor.
We got two thousand likes.
Maybe we can get up to like you know, 22, 2500, man.
Let's get that engagement up.
They open a hole in the car so they can shoot from there.
Yes, crazy.
So um the morning of October 24th, the hunt for the snipers quickly came to an end when a team of Maryland State Police, Montgomery County SWAT officers, and special agents from our hostage rescue team arrested the sleeping John Alan Mohammed and Lee Boyd, novel without a struggle.
Just a few hours early at approximately 1145 p.m.
Their dark blue 1990 Chevy Caprice was with its new Jersey license plate had been spotted at a rest stop parking parking lot off of I-70, Maryland.
Within the hour law forces swarmed the scene setting up a perimeter to check out any movements and make sure they'd be no escape.
What evidence uh experts from the FBI and other police forces found there was both revealing and shocking.
The car had a hole cut in the trunk near the license plate so that shots could be fired from within the vehicle.
It was in effect a rolling sniper's nest.
So in the car they found the Bushmaster 223 caliber rifle that had been used in each attack, a rifle scope for taking aim and a tripod to steady the shots, a back seat that had the seat metal removed between the passenger compartment and the trunk, enabling the shooter to get into the trunk from inside the car, the Chevy Caprice's owner's manual with the FBI laboratory, which the FBI laboratory detected, written impressions of one of the demand notes.
Um so that's really cool that they're able to actually like you you they used it as the stabilizer to write the notes, and they were able to see that with the in the lab.
Uh the general voice, the digital voice recorder used by both Malvo and Muhammad to make extortion demands.
A laptop stolen from one of the victims containing maps of the shooting sites and getaway routes from some of the crime scenes and maps, walkie-talkies, and many more items.
Okay, here's some.
You guys can see there's the hole right there that they had used.
Yeah.
Uh with the night in New Jersey plate.
And then here's a timeline.
Uh from October 2nd all the way to the 24th, which was outlined in the um documentary.
In the in the in the description, right?
Was that?
Oh, yeah, I'll put this link in the description for them.
Yeah, I should do that.
Good call.
Can you put can you put that for them, Angie?
Um, and then here is the Capri setup from a visual standpoint, guys.
Thank you.
I don't think it has any sound.
So, all right, so they got the guy sitting in there.
Wow, they literally paint the right.
Yep.
So you can lift that up and allows a sniper to get into a comfortable lying position.
right?
And obviously the trunk would be closed in this situation, but for the but for the purpose of this demonstration, they're showing you what it looks like.
And then bam, you could close it, and you don't see anything besides a small little extension outside the hole.
And that's how they were able to conduct the shootings without being caught for so long.
So pretty pretty smart tactic, and it kept them from being uh caught for damn near a month.
23 days of terror, guys.
Uh-uh.
So uh yeah.
Angie, what are your thoughts on a case?
I just find it crazy.
These guys are the most random terrorists.
Like they I mean, how they got together, this guy just briefly dayed the mother of the other one.
It's just crazy how they found like something in common between the two to do this thing.
It's just crazy.
Yeah, no, absolutely.
Uh so I'll I'll go through some of these chats, by the way, real fast.
Um C John uh C Johnny X goes.
Oh, so the FBI does have a profiling unit like the BAU behaviour behavioral analysis unit from the show criminal minds that investigate serial killers and other things like this case.
Uh yeah, I didn't, I don't know where the BU comes from, but yes, the FBI definitely does have uh like a behavior profilers.
Oops, sorry.
That was me.
That's fine.
That's that's the twisted talks with Noah goes, love the channel as always, Myron and Angie.
What was has your communication been like with Tate since he is released, and now he's holding up.
He's doing well, guys.
He's doing well.
Uh but talk with him.
He's he's he's uh he's all right.
Uh Ariel Walker, shout out to Andrew and Tristan.
Uh we love you, Angie.
Shout out to you.
Thank you.
Uh Ramin Hashamian goes, can you do more shows on your career and your cases?
I will.
Um Benny G, five bucks.
Uh Jay Villa goes, Myron, have you done a feta podcast on the Colt Heaven's Gate?
I have not.
Uh speaking of Colts, we got to do the Son of Sam as well for you guys.
Uh Umar Yasin goes, I'm referring to our brand sponsorship.
One of the brands I represent is interested.
You know what?
Do me a favor because Angie manages it.
Hit Fed it.1811 on Instagram.
That way won't be a spam.
There's unplugged fit and fresh a fit podcast on Instagram.
And uh we'll check it out.
Um thank you, Omar.
And if the numbers make sense, we'll think about it.
Uh I'm Ahmad.
I love you, Lord Myron of Miami.
Marriage Cause Divorce.
If I was a female, I would for sure shoot my shot.
Uh pause.
Appreciate that, bro.
Myron, we need El Chapo ASAP.
Yes, I'll do it.
El Chapo.
But that again is gonna have to be a series.
That's highly requested as well.
Yes, when we do the Mexican cartels, that's gonna be a series.
Them boys CIA, we here.
Okay.
Uh Natalie E goes, I love catching these fed it lives.
It feels like a big group of hilarious guys hanging out, having fun, watching true crime.
Absolutely.
I really enjoy the lives for that purpose, too.
Media need to be on the police payroll.
Uh, we name first, and that's for BBC News.
Yo, yeah.
What the fuck back?
Top life security.
Someone need my help.
Okay, appreciate that.
Secret Service.
I'm the most unsecret service of them all.
Okay.
Uh Ryoko goes, by the way, a tip that led to them was that a few people left a highway stop, and when they left, they saw the vehicle, found it weird, and called it in.
The sniper didn't shoot because it was a hiding spot.
Okay, fair enough.
Um, Secret Service again.
I'm the most unsecret service of them all.
Appreciate that.
Uh South Carolina police dispatcher from Alex.
What the fuck, bro?
Remember that the fucking lady didn't know what the fuck was going on?
Go back and watch our murder case, guys.
That was actually funny as well.
If they called me, I would have handled it on the spot.
No, you would have, bro.
You were trash too.
We in this bitch, Myron.
Feel free to call Zelda any time.
Shout out to you, Miami Police Department.
Y'all didn't help when I needed y'all though.
Um yes, this is a link, by the way, guys, for y'all that want to go ahead and get the uh beltway snipers.
I'll put that in the description for you guys.
Hey yo, Myron, you owe us some money.
No, I don't.
Uh Xena the Witch.
Someone better make a massad account.
Someone already did.
So um what else here?
Anything else that that we got?
Uh there were caught up.
So yeah.
Y'all are hilarious with these accounts, by the way.
We got ice in the house as well.
NSA in the house.
Uh I'll give y'all I see you guys coming in here.
I see the military police, ice, navy SEALs, police buddies.
Guys, NSA in the house.
Yeah, y'all are hilarious, bro.
Um asked for it and they delivered.
Yeah, they did.
Yeah, y'all made literally a million accounts.
Ummately.
U.S. Marshals, the one that made another U.S. Marshals one.
I'll give y'all wrenches.
Y'all better not fuck it up though.
If I give you guys these wrenches, KGB in the house now.
Imposter.
You guys are fucking.
Oh, we got another show.
CPS.
Uh Blink Dark Mellow goes, wonderful content as always, Myron.
I bought your book and read it in one day.
I can see why is it a best seller on Amazon?
Why women deserve less?
You're the best thanks again.
W chat, W Angie as well.
Yes, guys, the book is definitely a stores.
Why women deserve less?
Go ahead and get it, man.
I appreciate that.
Uh Chloe Whitstead or White's head, Whitehead goes, you guys are hilarious and always informative.
Thank you, Myron and Angie.
We got y'all, man.
Uh I think that uh what are your last thoughts on this one, Angie?
I already said that.
I was just you don't have anything else?
No, I just find it crazy.
But you guys follow the Instagram at Fetty.1811 and like the video and subscribe to the channel, please.
We just hit like 150,000 subscribers.
Dom Domonco get you to hundreds of you guys uh before the end of the year.
Yes.
That's the goal.
Let's hit 200k, guys.
Yeah.
Um, guys, I think that's pretty much it.
That covers the the DC snipers.
Uh, like the video, man, on your way out.
We're at 2.1k if we guys get us a 2500.
I really appreciate that.
Um, and yeah, this video is probably gonna be uh demonetized to a degree because of uh the the violence and terrorism and you know your guys' shit in the chat, uh which is hilarious.
But um, but yeah, man, I appreciate you guys.
Love you guys.
We'll catch you guys tomorrow for Money Monday.
We're gonna have uh Moneyburg in the house with Brandon Carter.
We're gonna have Aaron Clary, and we're gonna have an after hours gonna be a three-pee for you guys tomorrow.
There's a reason why we're number one, goddammit.
Dumb Del Monco.
We're working hard.
You guys are gonna have to.
Someone said Green River Killer.
Yeah, we already have an episode on the Green River Killer.
Go back to the playlist that I have.
Matter of fact, I'll go ahead and show it for you.
Um, if you guys want, right?
You go to the channel here, right?
Here it is.
And you're just gonna go into the serial killer playlist right here, and you will see the Green River Killer is right here, as well as all the other people.
And we got the mafia as well.
We'll probably we might uh me and Angie probably will film another episode for y'all for Thursday's video with the banana crime family.
I think will be the next one.
But uh, yeah, man.
Like the video, guys.
Love y'all.
Um, three P coming tomorrow.
And uh, yeah.
Catch you guys on the next one, man.
And W shout out to the Department of Justice and all you uh guys, DEA and all the three letter agencies that invaded the chat.
Um we got you.
Yeah, y'all are funny, man.
Um, you guys keep asking for um cases um that Myron had already covered.
So I would suggest you to check the playlist that he already made so you guys, you know, you have the cases there, okay?
Yeah, yeah.
A lot of cases, yeah.
They keep texting me, like, yeah, Angie, where is like the Sudya killer and and this and that?
And we already covered those guys.
Well, Myron did.
Yeah, Ryan Colbert Harris is a highly requested one, and Myron already covered that case.
So you guys check it out.
So, yeah, go back.
We got the playlist organized for y'all.
They're all there, man.
I covered we're probably covered a case that you want requested.
So, especially if it's a really big famous one.
Um, but yeah, mafia episode coming uh soon.
We'll catch you guys on the next one.
Love y'all.
Don't forget to like the video on your way out, of course.
And I'll see you guys on the next one.
Peace.
I'll special agent with homelands investigations.
Okay, guys, HSI.
The cases that I did mostly were human smuggling and drug traffic.
No one else has these documents, by the way.
Here's what better coverage.
Dr. Lafredo confirm lacerations due to stepping on glass.