MYSTERY
SNIPER: ANSWERS QUESTIONED
Afrikan.net
November 8, 2002
FACT
#1 Muhammad's ex-wife, with whom he has
had a stormy relationship marked by bitter
custody battles, recently relocated to the
DC area to take a job at, of all places,
John Ashcroft's Justice Department. This
peculiar fact, though reported by the British
press, has been curiously absent in the
blanket coverage of the case by the American
media.
Two
unlikely suspects have been selected to
play the roles of the feared DC snipers:
John Allen Muhammad, commonly described
as a 41-year-old 'drifter,' though until
fairly recently he had spent his entire
adult life in the military; and a 17-year-old
Jamaican immigrant named Lee Boyd Malvo
(also identified as Lee Byron Malvo and
John Lee Malvo), who entered the country
illegally several years ago.
The
pair allegedly conducted their killing spree
by utilizing what police have described
as a car that had been modified to create
a mobile sniper's nest. There are, alas,
numerous problems with this scenario. And
there is certainly no shortage of weirdness
surrounding the alleged exploits of the
pair.
Consider
the following:
Muhammad's
ex-wife, with whom he has had a stormy relationship
marked by bitter custody battles, recently
relocated to the DC area to take a job at,
of all places, John Ashcroft's Justice Department.
This peculiar fact, though reported by the
British press, has been curiously absent
in the blanket coverage of the case by the
American media. (http://www.observer.co.uk/focus/story/0,6903,820087,00.html)
Two
years ago, Muhammad kidnapped his own children,
in clear violation of a court order, and
took them out of the country for an extended
period of time. There is no indication that
he was charged with any crime in connection
with these actions, nor for repeatedly threatening
his former wife.
That
same former wife charged Muhammad, in court
documents, with tapping her phone line.
No indication has been given as to how Muhammad
acquired the skills and equipment to do
this. (http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/la-na-sniper25oct25004444.story)
The
rifle allegedly used in the shootings was
purchased in June from a Tacoma, Washington-based
dealer operating under the name "Bull's
Eye Shooter Supply." The shop, located
near the Army's Ft. Lewis base, is owned
by a former U.S. Army sniper instructor.
Muhammad completed his lengthy tour of duty
at Ft. Lewis, which has, curiously enough,
a sniper training program. (http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-profile26oct26.story)
But
wait ... according to investigator/writer
Jon Rappoport's newsletters, the Bushmaster
rifle that authorities first tried to connect
to Muhammad was actually purchased by him
from a different Tacoma gun dealer known
as "Welcher's Gun Shop." The problem
is, apparently, that Muhammad subsequently
sold that gun back to Welcher's, who then
sold it to another customer, who still has
the gun in Tacoma. Rappoport claims that
these transactions were confirmed by Welcher's
employees. In order then to put another
Bushmaster in Muhammad's hands, it was claimed
that he had, after selling back the first
rifle, purchased an identical one from Bull's
Eye. If Rappoport's information is correct,
and taking into consideration the ownership
of Bull's Eye, it is conceivable that the
second rifle purchase was fabricated after
the fact.
Though
Muhammad is generally portrayed by the media
as a chronically unemployed drifter who
stayed at homeless shelters, he doesn't
appear to have had problems with money.
Consider all of the following facts which
have emerged in various press accounts:
Before
kidnapping his children, Muhammad was ordered
to pay nearly $900 per month in child support
($869, by one account), indicating that
the court had reason to believe that he
had a fairly substantial income at the time.
He
has reportedly owned, or co-owned, several
businesses, including a karate school, an
auto repair shop, and something called,
strangely enough, "Reality Enterprises."
(http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/la-na-profile25oct25004444.story)
A
number of witnesses have commented on the
incongruity of an allegedly homeless man
who always had money to spend. The L.A.
Times reported that a former girlfriend
told her family that Muhammad's "story
didn't make any sense ... He was a hard-luck
drifter with money, a man who could pick
up and fly to the Caribbean whenever he
got the inclination." The same Times
report added that "She wasn't the only
one asking questions ... The director of
the shelter has said [of Muhammad] ... 'He
was rather secretive about his past and
present ... He was closed-mouthed. He didn't
have a visible source of income, but he
was able to travel at a moment's notice.'"
(http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-na-killers27oct27.story)
The Independent Online noted that with "no
apparent means of support, Muhammad and
companion John Lee Malvo traveled from the
Caribbean to the north-western United States,
and points in between, over the past year
and a half. How they financed their activities
remains a mystery." The man who runs
the homeless mission where Muhammad last
stayed in Washington state, Reverend Alan
Archer, was reportedly "amazed to see
Muhammad getting phone calls from a travel
agent." Archer recalled that Muhammad
flew off on ski trips to both Denver and
Salt Lake City. (http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?click_id=79&art_id=qw1035806221674B225&set_id=1)
While
living in Antigua, with no visible means
of support, Muhammad nevertheless was able
to send his three children to an exclusive
private school. (http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?click_id=79&art_id=qw1035806221674B225&set_id=1)
Two
years ago, Muhammad, an American citizen
born and raised in Louisiana, obtained an
Antiguan passport -- allegedly by lying
about who his mother was. Why he would be
taken at his word and not required to show
proof of Antiguan citizenship has not been
explained. (http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-profile26oct26.story)
Also unexplained is why he was issued the
passport in July 2000, although the Antiguan
government claims that its records don't
show Muhammad entering the country until
May of 2001. (http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?click_id=79&art_id=qw1035806221674B225&set_id=1)
Was Muhammad traveling on that passport
between July of 2000 and May of 2001? And
if so, to where?
Initial
reports speculated that Muhammad had received
sniper training. The Army has subsequently
denied this. Most reports now hold that
Muhammad, throughout what the Times described
as a "checkered, 16-year military career,"
never distinguished himself as a skilled
shooter. (http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/la-na-profile25oct25004444.story)
As the Times explained: "All soldiers
entering the Army undergo basic training
with M-16 rifles. Once every year, they
have to requalify, earning 'marksman,' 'sharpshooter'
or 'expert' marks. Muhammad ultimately earned
only a sharpshooter mark, so to compare
him to a military sniper would be inaccurate."
(http://www.calendarlive.com/printedition/calendar/cl-et-roug26oct26.story)
Indeed it would. To even be considered for
admission to the Army's sniper schools reportedly
requires three consecutive 'expert' rankings.
Muhammad could not even manage one such
score over the course of sixteen years.
He could though, rather amazingly, score
head shots on live targets from up to 500
yards away, even while firing from inside
a cramped car trunk with limited visibility.
Imagine that.
But
did Muhammad have more training than what
is officially acknowledged? He frequently
claimed that he had. Was this just baseless
boasting?
The
WSWS reported that "various sources
indicate that Muhammad liked to boast about
his service in the army and claimed to be
working for the CIA and FBI." While
applying at a government office on Antigua,
he "claimed to have attended 'Special
Forces/ Sniper School' in the US military
and to have 'taught urban warfare.'"
In the summer of 2002, Muhammad told a nephew
in Baton Rouge "a dubious story about
working for the Central Intelligence Agency."
(http://www.wsws.org/articles/2002/oct2002/snip-o28.shtml)
Muhammad
further claimed that Malvo was also a highly
trained operative, recruited for his ability
to infiltrate the youth culture. (http://www.msnbc.com/news/825625.asp?pne=msn&cp1=1#BODY)
The
Guardian reported that Muhammad "appears
to have told friends" that he had received
training as a sniper and had served in Special
Forces. (http://www.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,3604,819054,00.html)
Muhammad's
former business partner in the karate school
also recalled being told that his partner
had served in Special Forces. (http://www.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,3604,819695,00.html)
Muhammad's
alleged accomplice, just seventeen years
old and with no formal firearms training,
is claimed to have been the gunman in some
of the sniper shootings. Reports claim that
Muhammad trained Malvo in the use of firearms
by taking target practice on a tree stump
in the backyard of a Tacoma home -- as though
hitting a large tree stump from across a
backyard is equivalent to hitting a human
target from hundreds of yards away, from
an awkward position within a car trunk.
According
to published reports, neither of the two
had ever lived in the Washington, DC area.
The pair arrived there just prior to the
time that the shootings started. Strangely
though, they had a thorough enough knowledge
of the area to locate strategic sites from
which to shoot, and to map out escape routes
that enabled them to evade capture.
The
car, a 1990 blue Chevrolet Caprice acquired
just before the shooting spree began, is
a former police cruiser that was purchased
from a New Jersey auto dealership named
(and this, I have to say, is a nice touch)
"Sure Shot Autos." (http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/la-na-sniper25oct25004444.story)
I
should probably add here that a blue Chevy
Caprice bears strikingly little resemblance
to a white van or box truck.
And
I should probably also add here that the
nation was witness to some of the most brilliant
police work in recent memory when someone
saw fit to release a "composite sketch"
of a featureless, white box truck, and have
it plastered all over the nation's television
screens. Could anything have possibly been
more counterproductive? You can imagine
the calls flooding into the hotline: "Yeah,
I think I counted 27 of them sniper trucks
today."
Just
hours before the suspects were arrested,
Chief Charles Moose - who has become a fixture
on cable and network newscasts - issued
via national television what appeared for
all the world to be a post-hypnotic, 'triggering'
cue. As the Guardian described it: "Hours
before the arrest yesterday morning of the
two men now believed to be responsible for
the string of murders around Washington,
the Montgomery county police chief, Charles
Moose, made his strangest communication
with the then-unknown suspects. Swallowing
hard, he began to read from a prepared statement.
'You indicated that you want us to do and
say certain things,' he said, as mystified
reporters looked on. 'You asked us to say,
quote: 'We have caught the sniper like a
duck in a noose.' We understand that hearing
us say that is important to you.' Investigators
offered no illumination of the reference,
even after John Allen Muhammad and Lee Malvo
were taken into custody yesterday."
(http://www.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,3604,818958,00.html)
Just hours later, the suddenly known suspects
were found sleeping soundly, and were promptly
taken into custody without offering any
resistance. They were only a few miles from
both the first and last shooting scenes.
That final surreal announcement followed
a series of increasingly bizarre, cryptic
communications by Moose to the purported
snipers.
At
one point, Moose pleaded with the suspects
to call police on the phone number that
had supposedly been left behind in a message
from the sniper. No one in the media bothered
to ask why, if the number was in fact left
by the sniper, the police were now imploring
the suspect to call them on that number.
Did the sniper leave the police their own
phone number, just in case they might have
forgotten it?
Prior
to last year, John Allen Muhammad was known
as John Allen Williams. He changed his name
just in time, it appears, for the media
to be able to portray him as some sort of
Islamic fundamentalist. Eleven years ago
though, Williams served in the Gulf War,
demonstrating that he apparently had no
reservations about participating in a brutal
assault upon a predominantly Islamic nation.
(http://www.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,3604,819054,00.html)
Muhammad
has been described by various witnesses
as an extremely controlling man who exerted
an extraordinary amount of influence over
his young accomplice. Their relationship
has been described as "drill sergeant/recruit."
(http://www.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,3604,819695,00.html)
Some reports claim that the pair first met
in Antigua, while others suggest that they
first teamed up in Tacoma. No reports have
offered much insight into how or why this
odd couple became partners.
Muhammad
was not at first booked on murder charges,
but on charges of harassing his ex-wife
two years ago -- thereby illustrating that
police did indeed have enough evidence to
charge Muhammad with crimes for the actions
that he had taken against his ex-wife, but
had previously chosen not to do so.
As
previously noted, Malvo entered the United
States illegally. Not long before the sniper
killings began, he was detained by the INS,
who were aware of his status as an illegal
immigrant. Strangely though, he was subsequently
released. Under normal circumstances, Malvo
would have been deported and John Muhammad
would have been incarcerated before the
sniper shootings even began.
It
is asserted by the police that someone claiming
to be the sniper told them in a telephone
conversation that they should "take
him seriously," and that if they had
any doubts about that, they should "check
with the people in Montgomery." (http://www.guardian.co.uk/Print/0,3858,4531898,00.html)
If this conversation did in fact take place,
which seems rather doubtful, the logical
conclusion to draw would have been that
the sniper was referring to Montgomery County,
Maryland, where six of the sniper's victims
were shot. For some inexplicable reason
though, police immediately focused their
attention on Montgomery, Alabama. Nearly
instantaneously, they then claimed to have
connected the sniper killings to a seemingly
unrelated robbery/murder, which was committed
with a handgun of a caliber not known to
have been in the possession of Muhammad
or Malvo. Why the investigators turned their
attention to Alabama, why they focused on
this particular unsolved crime, and how
they were able to suddenly identify a previously
unidentified fingerprint, are all questions
that police have not bothered to provide
answers to.
The
L.A. Times reported that there were a number
of items in the suspects' car at the time
of their arrest that seem a little out of
place in a homeless drifter's vehicle. In
addition to, of course, the Bushmaster rifle,
scope and bipod, there was a Sony laptop
computer, a pair of two-way radios, and
- as one might expect to find - a global
positioning system. (http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-sniper30oct30.story)
That
same Times report implicates Muhammad in
the February 16 murder of a 21-year-old
Tacoma woman. The link to Muhammad was made
as follows: "Tacoma Police Chief David
A. Brame said at a news conference late
Monday that a Tacoma gun hobbyist he declined
to identify had befriended and housed Muhammad
and Malvo for several months this year.
The gun owner came forward after the two
men were charged in the sniper rampage.
Brame said the man voluntarily turned over
to police a .45-caliber semiautomatic pistol
and a .44 magnum revolver that he said he
had loaned to Muhammad on occasion during
the first six months of this year."
Ballistic tests purportedly revealed that
the .45 was used for the murder, and the
.44 was used to vandalize a synagogue. Obvious
questions arise: Who is this mysterious
"gun hobbyist"? Is he a member
of the law enforcement community? Why did
he "on occasion" loan his guns
to a man he had known for only a few months?
For what purpose did he think the guns were
being used? Why isn't the "gun hobbyist"
himself a suspect, and why is his identity
being protected?
On
October 30, the New York Times reported
that "State and federal investigators
said today that John Muhammad had been talking
to them for more than an hour on the day
of his arrest in the sniper shootings, explaining
the roots of his anger, when the United
States attorney for Maryland told them to
deliver him to Baltimore to face federal
weapons charges and forcing them to end
their interrogation." The investigators
complained that Muhammad had waived his
right to an attorney and was talking freely
when federal prosecutor Thomas Di Biagio
shut their interrogation down. Di Biagio
claimed that he was acting on orders from
the White House and the Justice Department,
though both seem to have distanced themselves
from Di Biagio's actions. Investigators
claim that they felt confident that they
could have gotten a confession out of Muhammad.
Federal officials claimed, rather remarkably,
that they weren't really interested in a
confession. An unnamed "senior federal
law enforcement official" was quoted
as saying: "Tell me what more we need
from them? We have the ballistics. We don't
need the confession." But was it a
confession that the federal officials were
worried about the investigators hearing?
Or was it something else? Whatever it was,
they won't be hearing it now -- the Times
report noted that, "since then Muhammad
has not talked to investigators." (http://www.nytimes.com/2002/10/30/national/nationalspecial/30XCOUN.html?todaysheadlines)
The
Independent Online noted in passing, without
elaboration, that Muhammad's ready supply
of cash may have been due to a "combination
of odd jobs and crimes that included human
smuggling." (http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?click_id=79&art_id=qw1035806221674B225&set_id=1)
Is that what Muhammad's rather mysterious
travels were really all about? And if so,
on whose behalf was he working?
Clearly
there was someone, or some entity, bankrolling
Muhammad's activities. Who were his hidden
benefactors? The media will likely either
avoid the issue entirely, or will attempt
to link Muhammad to some sort of 'terrorist'
organization, though it isn't likely that
many fingers will be pointed at his most
likely benefactor -- that world-wide terrorist
organization that we all know and love as
the CIA.
This
bulletin includes only the bits and pieces
of incongruous information that have emerged
thus far through various avenues of the
media. While there is far more that has
yet to be discovered, it is already clear
that there is much more to this story than
what has been presented to the American
people.
Meanwhile,
U.S. authorities are busily maneuvering
to stage a trial with a predetermined outcome
-- one that will include the execution of
17-year-old Malvo. The media is clamoring
for that execution to take place, even though
there has been no compelling evidence presented
thus far to indicate the young man's guilt.
It
is important to remember that we are talking
here about a kid who has been victimized
throughout the entirety of his brief stay
here on planet Earth. Born onto the mean
streets of Jamaica, in a land ruled by violent
drug-lords, and apparently abandoned by
his father, Malvo survived a childhood that
no kid should have to endure.
Smuggled
into the States in the hold of a cargo ship,
in the hopes of finding a better life, Malvo
found nothing but further victimization
and despair -- at the hands of a man named
John Allen Muhammad.
But
through it all, Malvo remained - as friends
and acquaintances have reported - an intelligent,
thoughtful, unerringly polite and friendly
kid -- who also was, if police spokesmen
and the media are to be believed, a serial
sniper.
So
let's execute the bastard. We don't even
need to bother with a trial. The sooner
the better. Maybe we can make it the half-time
show at this year's Super Bowl. Then we'll
all feel like winners.
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