Charles Moose, who became known nationally for his role in informing the public during the Washington, D.C., sniper attacks 19 years ago, died Thursday at the age of 68 in his home, officials in ...
Nov. 26 (UPI) --Charles Moose, who led the Montgomery County police as snipers terrorized the Washington, D.C., area in 2002, died on Thanksgiving Day, the department announced. Moose, who led the ...
WASHINGTON D.C. (7News) — Former Montgomery County Police Chief Charles Moose, who was at the helm of the department during the 2002 DC sniper attacks, has passed away at the age of 68. Moose's wife, ...
Charles A. Moose is in a bit of a bind. As Montgomery County Police Chief, Moose wants desperately to identify the sniper who has terrorized the Washington D.C. suburbs for the past eight days, most ...
Just a few months ago, many people might have assumed that the police chief of Maryland's upscale Montgomery County had a relatively easy job. But on Oct. 3, the Washington, D.C., suburb was the scene ...
The world may know him now as Chief Charles Moose, the Montgomery County police chief who was the foremost face of the sniper hunt. But at the D.C. Air National Guard, Chief Moose answers to "major." ...
Charles Moose, who helmed the Montgomery County Police Department when authorities arrested the DC snipers, has died, according to a department Facebook post. The 68-year-old passed on Thanksgiving, ...
Charles Moose, who served as the police chief of Montgomery County during the D.C. Sniper investigation, has passed away, his wife announced on Thanksgiving. For three weeks in October 2002, Moose was ...
Montgomery County Police Chief Charles Moose, who became the public face of the 2002 investigation into the Beltway Sniper rampage, was determined to squeeze as much out of life as possible, his wife ...
Charles A. Moose, the Montgomery County police chief who led a three-week manhunt for snipers who killed 10 people in the Washington metropolitan area in October 2002 and later resigned amid ...
On Thanksgiving Day, Charles Moose, Portland’s first Black police chief, died while watching a football game on television. He was 68 years old. Moose hadn’t lived in Portland for some time. He left ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results