Who is Raymond Spencer, person of interest in the D.C. shooting?
On Saturday, D.C. Police Chief Robert J. Contee III said the gunman fired more than 100 rounds from a long gun, and he confirmed reports that bullet holes were being found in buildings in the area.
“There are probably going to be a lot of bullet holes we’re going to find,” he said. “That investigation will be going on for a while.”
Contee on Friday all but said Spencer was the gunman they were seeking, declaring that law enforcement officers were no longer searching for Spencer after they discovered the suspected gunman had killed himself as tactical officers breached his door.
Police said four were injured in the shooting in the Van Ness area, including a man in his 50s, a woman in her 30s, another woman who was grazed by a bullet and a 12-year-old girl.
By Saturday morning, little was known about the suspect. Authorities did not say whether the gunman was targeting Burke, whether he attended or had any affiliation to the school, or what ties he had to the Van Ness neighborhood. But authorities indicated that Spencer’s online footprint provided insight into the shooting that sent one of the busiest avenues in D.C. into panic and launched armored vehicles and helicopters into the area during a frantic search for the gunman.
Law enforcement officials with knowledge of the investigation said investigators examined social media posts attributed to a user named Raymond Spencer online, including 4chan, an online message board with millions of users. The user wrote, “Dear God please forgive me,” in one message, four minutes after shots were reported.
The following posts seemed to taunt police, “They’re in the wrong part of the building right now searching XD.” Later, the user wrote: “Waiting for police to catch up with me.”
Contee said a graphic video posted online Friday showing what appears to be the shooting is authentic, though it is unclear when it was posted. The video shows the Burke school’s glass walkway covered in posters from its recent financial aid auction, themed after the game Clue. The sound of gunfire erupts, and one of the glass panels shatters.
On Wikipedia, Spencer, last updated his user page on Friday at 3:58 p.m., just after the shooting. The page said he was an “a AR-15 aficionado” in his biography.
His relatives could not be immediately reached. In Fairfax County, police Friday night also awaited at Fair Lakes Circle, at location believed to be Spencer’s home.
“We have identified a possible residence and are closely monitoring this location,” Fairfax County police said in a statement.
The Friday afternoon shooting rocked a residential neighborhood in Washington. Just before 3:30 p.m., police cars streamed down Connecticut Avenue, and surrounding schools went into lockdown. Parents of students sheltering in place at nearby schools feared the worst, and police officers on foot shouted at passersby to “move” and “get down.”
In a letter to the city, Mayor Muriel E. Bowser (D) called the shooting Friday a “heartbreaking day for our community” and decried the continued gun violence in the District.
“Unfortunately, tonight, I looked into the eyes of parents who were terrified, and they were terrified thinking of what might happen to their children,” the mayor said in her letter. “This epidemic of gun violence in our country, the easy access to firearms — it has got to stop.”
She wrote of children in the community who sheltered in place for hours and residents who were escorted out of their homes by police.
“Four people, including one child, were hit by gunfire in one short but devastating act of violence — the second of four shootings in our city today,” Bowser said. “All of this because a person who had no business having a gun got access to one and used it to terrorize a school community.”
The suspect was found on the fifth-floor in the AVA Van Ness apartment building, which faces the Burke School, where police believe he may have fired from an apartment balcony, Contee…
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