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Moose resigned last month, but his departure did not resolve the legal dispute over his book about the three-week manhunt following the sniper attacks that terrorized the Washington area last fall.
Chief Moose was hailed as a hero for his role in heading the sniper investigation that led to the capture of John Muhammad and Lee Boyd Malvo. However, he resigned from the police department only ...
As for any objection to Moose profiting from tragic events, council member Howard A. Denis (R-Potomac-Bethesda) said he did not think Montgomery residents would mind.
Moose said there were no plans at present to publish the sniper’s whole letter. “That doesn’t say that we won’t do that,” Moose said. Also on Wednesday, Maryland Gov. Parris Glendening said that if ...
Moose, who led the team investigating the Washington-area sniper shootings, has resigned, a police spokeswoman said Wednesday, June 18, 2003. (AP Photo/Gail Burton) ...
Moose signed a deal with a New York publishing house in January to write the book, tentatively titled "Three Weeks in October: The Manhunt for the D.C. Sniper," scheduled for release this fall.
Montgomery County Police Chief Charles Moose talks with reporters outside police headquarters in Rockville, Md., in this Oct. 7, 2002, file photo about one of the sniper shootings. Moose, who ...
Could be 13th attack by sniper; note found threatening children ROCKVILLE, Md. -- A bus driver was shot to death Tuesday as he was about to set out on his morning route in what authorities fear ...
ROCKVILLE, Md. -- Who gets a piece of the half-million-dollar reward for the capture of the Washington-area sniper suspects may take awhile to decide, authorities said Tuesday. Montgomery County ...