Skip navigation.
Home
"The Haymarket Smoking Gun"

News

November 30, 2011

12:35
A District man pled guilty to aggravated assault, after prosecutors said he shot a woman in the head with a shotgun.Photo Credit: Bob Connors
Source: News 4
Categories: Local News
12:10
Prince William County’s status in a national flood program that keeps down insurance rates could be in jeopardy if it allows mobile homes in Woodbridge to be rebuilt in a federally-designated floodway, county officials said. That’s why the Board of County Supervisors delayed a vote Tuesday on whether to go to Circuit Court over a county appeal board’s decision to allow mobile homes to be rebuilt in Holly Acres Mobile Home Park. Homes there were washed away and dozens were left homeless in the wake of September floods during Tropical Storm Lee. Read full article >>
Source: Local News
Categories: Local News
12:00
The man who shot President Ronald Reagan went to a Barnes & Noble and viewed books about the former president and presidential assassinations during day visits away from a mental hospital, authorities said. At a hearing on Wednesday, prosecutors brought up that John Hinckley did this twice at a hearing about whether or not he should be allowed more time away from the hospital where he has been since the assassination attempt. Prosecutors said Hinckley, who shot President Reagan in 1981 outside the Washington Hilton hotel, went to the bookstore on two occasions. Hinckley sought books on Reagan, assassination, police say During the hearing, prosecutors said Hinckley’s mother dropped him off at a movie theater and then left. However, instead of going to the movie, Secret Service surveillance showed that he went to Barnes & Noble and looked at books about Reagan and presidential assassinations. Afterward, he returned to the lobby of the movie theater lobby, where his mother picked him up. It’s not clear what books he read at the bookstore during the second incident. Lawyers for Hinckley, however, said he has responded well to treatment. Moving toward full-time release They say St. Elizabeth's Hospital, where he is confined, support a plan to have Hinckley completely removed from the facility within a year. Hinckley, who was found by a jury to be insane when he shot and wounded Reagan outside the Washington Hilton in 1981, has for years been able to spend days at his mother's home in Virginia. On Wednesday, a Washington judge began hearing arguments that Hinckley should be allowed additional visits of 17 and 24 days. The city's St. Elizabeths Hospital also wants the ability to decide if Hinckley should live away from the facility full-time, according to a court document. Government: Hinckley still a danger to others Government lawyers oppose the plan, calling it "premature and ill conceived." They say Hinckley is "a man capable of great violence" and that he is not "sufficiently well to alleviate the concern that this violence may be repeated." But Hinckley's lawyer, Barry Levine, has said there is no evidence Hinckley is a danger to himself or to others. Earlier this year, he called the government's court filing opposing expanded privileges "shameful fear-mongering without any factual basis." The hearing before Judge Paul L. Friedman is expected to take several days. The witness lists include Hinckley's sister and brother as well as his psychiatrist and case manager. Members of the U.S. Secret Service are expected to testify for the government, which has suggested that the plan for expanded release would not give Secret Service agents an adequate ability to monitor Hinckley at certain times. Reagan eventually recovered from the shooting and went on to serve two terms as president. A secret service agent and police officer who were shot also recovered from their wounds. Reagan's press secretary, James Brady, was shot in the head and permanently disabled. He has since become an advocate for preventing gun violence. Reagan died in 2004 at the age of 93. The Associated Press contributed to this story.
Source: Local News
Categories: Local News
11:51
The House will vote today on a measure that would rename a room in the Capitol Visitor Center after Gabe Zimmerman. He was a Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords' staffer, who was killed in January's shooting spree...Photo Credit: Timothy Persinko
Source: News 4
Categories: Local News
11:44
A DC paramedic is on paid administrative leave pending an investigation into the death of an 87-year-old woman.Photo Credit: Getty Images
Source: News 4
Categories: Local News
11:17
The tree house can stay. The Fairfax County Zoning Board ruled Wednesday morning that Marc Grapin, a Falls Church resident and Iraq war veteran, can keep the tree house he built for his two sons in the front yard of his home. Grapin and more than a dozen supporters delivered a petition that more than 1,500 people signed in support of the tree house, which he built for his sons to fulfill a promise he made before he was deployed. The zoning board voted to approve a variance, which means the tree house, which is in Grapin's front yard, can stay, provided he meets certain criteria. That criteria includes a time limit for how long the tree house can stay - five years or if and when he moves - and an order that the plants that have grown around the tree must stay. Grapin spent $1,400 and six weeks building the tree house, but someone registered an anonymous complaint about it in October. At that point, Fairfax County said the 10-by-10 foot structure had to come down. The order was given despite the fact that a county official gave him the go-ahead to build it.
Source: News 7
Categories: Local News, News
11:17
Montgomery County Police are holding a suspect in the investigation into three carjacking/robberies in Wheaton over the past week.Photo Credit: Montgomery County Police
Source: News 4
Categories: Local News
11:17
Source: News 4
Categories: Local News
11:17
The tree house can stay. The Fairfax County Zoning Board ruled Wednesday morning that Marc Grapin, a Falls Church resident and Iraq war veteran, can keep the tree house he built for his two sons in the front yard of his home. Grapin and more than a dozen supporters delivered a petition that more than 1,500 people signed in support of the tree house, which he built for his sons to fulfill a promise he made before he was deployed. The zoning board voted to approve a variance, which means the tree house, which is in Grapin's front yard, can stay, provided he meets certain criteria. That criteria includes a time limit for how long the tree house can stay - five years or if and when he moves - and an order that the plants that have grown around the tree must stay. Grapin spent $1,400 and six weeks building the tree house, but someone registered an anonymous complaint about it in October. At that point, Fairfax County said the 10-by-10 foot structure had to come down. The order was given despite the fact that a county official gave him the go-ahead to build it.
Source: Local News
Categories: Local News
10:27
The D.C. Council is considering a bill to allow residents to get specialty license plates featuring the logo one of the city's eight professional sports teams.Photo Credit: Kelvin Robinson
Source: News 4
Categories: Local News
10:22
Facebook settles a user privacy case as the social networking site prepares to go public.Photo Credit: BJ Lutz
Source: News 4
Categories: Local News
09:51
Prosecutor Paul Ebert said he sought to try Aaron Thomas first because the charges against him in this jurisdiction are especially heinous.
Source: Local News
Categories: Local News
09:30
The alleged East Coast Rapist on Wednesday had his first hearing in Prince William County court, where he faces charges for a 2009 attack on three teenage girls. Police have linked Aaron H. Thomas, 40, to a series of rapes and other attacks on women that began in Maryland in the late 1990s and continued in Virginia, Connecticut and Rhode Island over more than a decade. Read full article >>
Source: Local News
Categories: Local News
09:03
The suspected East Coast rapist appeared in court for the first time on Wednesday morning, a hearing during which Aaron Thomas quickly demanded access to an attorney. Thomas, who was extradited to Prince William County on Tuesday, appeared through a video conference at a hearing that lasted all of five minutes. Judge Scott Bailey said that Thomas is facing eight charges in Virginia: two for rape, three for use of a firearm during rape and three for abduction. But when Bailey asked the suspect if he understood the charges, Thomas sat silently for about 45 seconds before saying no. When the judge asked Thomas, who stared at the floor throughout the hearing, what he meant, he responded, "I want an attorney." A preliminary hearing for Thomas has been set for Jan. 25. Thomas is accused of raping 17 women over a span of more than a decade in locations across the East Coast. He was arrested in March near his home in New Haven, Conn., where pleaded not guilty to charges of raping a woman in 2007. Authorities say they have DNA evidence that links him to crimes against a dozen women.
Source: Local News
Categories: Local News
08:09
A Manassas man is charged with slashing the throat of a drinking buddy Sunday night.
Source: Local News
Categories: Local News
08:09
A Manassas-area man faces a slew of charges after assaulting a Manassas po­lice officer Monday.
Source: Local News
Categories: Local News
07:43
"I feel like I haven't had to work a day in my career. It's been so much fun," Hadden Culp says of his 33 years and nearly as many job duties.
Source: Local News
Categories: Local News
07:38
D.C. police are investigating a bizarre incident that has left a pedestrian seriously injured.Photo Credit: Timothy Persinko
Source: News 4
Categories: Local News
07:37
Except for a few, mostly minor incidents, the D.C. police and the U.S. Park Police have shown restraint and tactical sophistication around demonstrators downtown.Photo Credit: Chris Gordon
Source: News 4
Categories: Local News
07:36
A man is critically injured after having been dragged by a taxi in Dupont Circle early Wednesday.Photo Credit: Feed Loader
Source: News 4
Categories: Local News