SILVER
SPRING, Maryland, October 22 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Police
launched a new major hunt across the Washington region Tuesday, October
22, after a bus driver was shot and killed, sparking fears that a serial
sniper had claimed a 10th fatal victim.
Police
did not immediately link the killing of Conrad Johnson to the sniper but
said the shooting was being investigated as if it were another in a
string of sniper attacks, which have left nine dead and three wounded,
reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).
Montgomery
County Police Chief Charles Moose, who is coordinating the hunt, said
Johnson, a 35-year-old father of two, was killed as he stood on the
steps of his bus before dawn and that his killer had escaped.
“At
this point we have no vehicle lookout to share. We have no person
lookout to share,” Moose told a somber press conference.
A
single shot felled the man in a way chillingly similar to the other nine
deaths and three woundings blamed on the sniper since October 2.
Helicopters
buzzed overhead as police cast a new dragnet around the scene of the
killing in the Aspen Hill district of Montgomery County.
Police
cordoned off the bus stop along tree-lined Connecticut Avenue, a main
route linking Washington to the sniper-fearing northern suburbs.
Commuters
caught in traffic jams of up to 16 kilometers (10 miles) took two or
three hours to get into Washington as police carried out car-by-car
checks on major roads.
The
sniper’s spree opened with five murders over 16 hours in Montgomery
county, near the latest killing.
All
the targets were hit as they went about daily activities.
One
man was riding a lawn mower, four were killed in gas stations and others
in shopping mall car parks.
“We
remain concerned about the safety of all the people in our region,”
Moose said.
“We
realize that the person, or the people, involved in this have shown a
clear willingness and ability to kill people of all ages, all races, all
genders, all professions.”
The
last confirmed victim was a 37-year-old man shot Saturday October 19,
outside a restaurant in Ashland, Virginia - some 145 kilometers (90
miles) south of Washington.
He
is in critical condition in hospital.
At
the scene of that investigation, police found a letter that included a
telephone number and apparently sought to communicate with police.
The
letter was hostile, threatening further violence and demanding money,
according to The Baltimore Sun newspaper, citing police sources.
Moose
sought to establish some kind of communication with the sniper, or
someone close to the killer at earlier press conferences this week.
“The
message that needs to be delivered is that we are going to respond to a
message that we have received.
“We
are preparing a response at this time,” he told reporters Monday,
October 21.
A
few hours later, Moose said investigators wanted a new chance to talk to
someone who had made contact on a special line.
The
Sun reported that someone called the
number and left what was apparently a garbled recorded message,
according to police sources.
“The
person who called could not hear everything that you said. The audio was
unclear and we want to get it right.
“Call
us back so that we can clearly understand,” the police chief told
reporters, again declining to explain the apparent contacts but urging
the media to repeat his appeal as much as possible.
The
only previous message from the sniper was left at the scene of a
previous shooting when he reportedly wrote on a Tarot card: “Dear
Policeman, I am God.”
Some
schools in Virginia were closed Monday and remain closed Tuesday.
But
Maryland authorities said they had no immediate plan to give the same
order