c*****g 发帖数: 21627 | 1 【 以下文字转载自 Military 讨论区 】
发信人: merlin (露上湿沙壁,暮幽晓寂寂), 信区: Military
标 题: 民主党创造的新美国:7/4号DC 地铁里的恐怖杀人案 (转载)
发信站: BBS 未名空间站 (Wed Jul 8 12:02:02 2015, 美东)
发信人: helloterran (hi you), 信区: WashingtonDC
标 题: 民主党创造的新美国:7/4号DC 地铁里的恐怖杀人案 (转载)
发信站: BBS 未名空间站 (Wed Jul 8 03:04:52 2015, 美东)
大家仔细读读Washington DC地铁上的这个恐怖案例,就是上个周末7月4号的事。
无业黑混混为了抢手机,40多刀捅死大学生,完了还猛踢尸体头部泄愤,随后把整个车
厢抢了个遍
全车乘客引颈就戮,无一出手干预。倒是有乘客主动交钱买命,还有人说“我没看你脸
,不要杀我”
这个混混,是周末刚刚因为袭警逮捕,杀人当天才释放的。
不许拥枪,不许正当自卫。liberal统治下,结局就是这种恐怖世界。
Horrified passengers witnessed brutal July 4 slaying aboard Metro car
Jasper Spires boarded the Red Line Metro train at Rhode Island Avenue
shortly before 1 p.m. Saturday, joining passengers from the District and
elsewhere headed to various Fourth of July festivities, among them the Foo
Fighters concert at RFK Stadium.
As the train rumbled toward its next stop, at NoMa-Gallaudet, a three-minute
ride, D.C. police said, the 18-year-old Spires — who may have been high on
synthetic drugs — tried to grab a cellphone tucked into the waistband of a
recent American University graduate headed to a gathering with friends.
The two struggled, police said, and the terror began.
Police and a witness interviewed said passengers trapped in the moving train
huddled at both ends of the car and watched in horror as Spires punched 24-
year-old Kevin Joseph Sutherland until he fell to the floor, then stabbed
him until he was dead. Court documents say the victim was cut or stabbed 30
or 40 times, in the chest, abdomen, back, side and arms. Police said the
assailant then threw the victim’s cellphone and returned to stomp on
Sutherland’s body.
“We were in a moving train,” said a 52-year-old woman, who spoke on the
condition that she not be named because she is both a victim and a witness
to a crime. “You’re not really sure what you need to do. . . .
This man is holding a bloody knife. I don’t think anyone was going to try
and stop him.”
When the frenzy was over, the woman, who is from Texas and was headed to the
concert with her 76-year-old father, said the attacker turned his bloody
knife on them. A police report said he told her father, who lives in the
District, “Give me what you got,” took $60 and threw the man’s wallet on
the floor. The man’s daughter then handed over an additional $160 “to keep
him from hurting her father,” a police report said. The attacker also
robbed other passengers, police said.
[Suspect arrested in fatal Metro stabbing]
The witness’s account and a police affidavit filed in D.C. Superior Court
on Tuesday describe a harrowing incident aboard train car No. 3045 on a
patriotic holiday that attracts tens of thousands of tourists to the nation
’s capital for concerts, fireworks and other activities.
Witnesses said and surveillance footage shows that the assailant was the
first person off the downtown-bound train car when it reached the NoMa
station after the killing — and that he took off his camouflage pants
before jumping a turnstile. The arrest affidavit says that after clearing
the fare meter, he dropped the pants and a black book bag, which a bystander
picked up and held for police.
In the bag, according to the affidavit, was a washcloth with what was
suspected to be blood and an AmeriHealth insurance card with Spires’s name
printed on it. Police said they also found a small, black folding knife in a
trash can.
D.C. police arrested Spires on Monday morning after a citywide manhunt and
charged him with first-degree murder while armed. A D.C. Superior Court
judge ordered him detained during an initial court appearance Tuesday. In
the arrest affidavit, a police officer described past encounters with Spires
, saying that “he acted as if he was under the influence and would talk to
himself.”
Spires, who had attended a private college in North Carolina but was no
longer enrolled, was previously arrested most recently on Thursday when
police said he accosted a man on Wisconsin Avenue in Friendship Heights and
later kicked two officers as they tried to handcuff him. Police had
forwarded to prosecutors charges that included felony robbery, but because
nothing was taken from the man, the U.S. attorney’s office said there was
insufficient evidence to support the charge. Prosecutors instead charged
Spires with misdemeanor assault, and he was freed from custody Friday.
The police affidavit says that on Saturday morning, Spires went to a police
station in Northwest Washington and retrieved personal items that had been
seized when he was arrested. One was a black book bag that police said is
the same one left behind at the Metro station.
There was no guarantee that a felony charge would have resulted in Spires
being detained. Until that time, his run-ins with police were minor —
involving allegations of failing to pay a Metro fare and loitering. But his
release angered Sutherland’s uncle and raised questions from D.C. Police
Cathy L. Lanier.
Police said Spires was seen on surveillance video entering the Metro station
at Rhode Island Avenue at 12:38 p.m. wearing a red bandanna, gold Ray-Ban
aviator sunglasses and high-top sneakers. Aboard the train, he confronted
Sutherland, police said.
“I watched [the attacker] drop-kick him in the head several times, like he
wanted to kick his head off,” said the woman who was on her way to the
concert with her father. “We saw the perpetrator kicking the man. He had
him on the ground, punching him, kicking him and stabbing him.”
The woman said Sutherland was “moaning a lot. . . . Never in my
life have I seen anything like this. I saw [the attacker] bent over him. I
did see the bloody knife in his hand.”
The woman, who said she was among about 10 passengers on the car, pulled out
her phone and called 911. Another passenger, she said, moved forward on the
train to get help. Police said Spires robbed other people on the car,
although the timing was not immediately clear. He has not been charged in
those robberies.
The arrest affidavit says Spires walked through the car and asked people, “
What y’all got,” and then rifled through a man’s pants, taking a fare
card and a wallet. Police said he took $65 and threw the wallet and the fare
card to the ground.
The 52-year-old woman said she was terrified. “I would have to say that my
instinct was to stay put and try to become as small as possible,” she said.
“I’m looking, but I don’t want to be noticed by him.”
During the robbery, she said, “I really thought when he had my dad stand up
and he was standing up close to him that he was going to knife him. I didn
’t know what he would do after he got money off my father.”
She said her father’s shirt, pants and wallet were stained with blood.
The woman said she and the other passengers told one another that it was too
dangerous to intervene. “I think we were all trying to stay away from him
considering he had a knife,” she said. “People were in front of us were
saying, ‘Don’t do that.’ ”
The woman told the attacker that she was not looking at his face, even
though she had already gotten a good look at him.
“I did not want him to think that he had to hurt us because we would
identify him. I wanted him to think that he could walk away from this, and
that’s what he did.”
When the train pulled into the NoMA-Gallaudet station, the attacker left. “
He did not run,” she woman said. “He walked. He walked very quickly.”
Mary Pat Flaherty and Faiz Siddiqui contributed to this report. |
|