Signed in as:
filler@godaddy.com
Signed in as:
filler@godaddy.com
Oct 6, 2022 — Most of the time, Mildred Muhammad and the decayed, violent marriage she escaped are forgotten in the retelling of how John Allen Muhammad and...
October 11, 2021 ~ Domestic violence can impact anyone, at any age, and under a variety of circumstances. Mildred Muhammad is the ex-wife of the D.C. Sniper. She said her husband went on a deadly, three-week rampage as practice, and she was the real target.
October 11, 2021 ~ When the DC Sniper attacks terrorized that city in 2002, few knew that the shooter was a domestic abuser, looking to kill his ex-wife and get custody of their children. The sniper’s ex-wife, Mildred Muhammad, survived her husband John’s attempts to kill her, and went on to become an expert in domestic violence, an author, and a speaker on the topic.
October 6, 2021 ~ Mildred Muhammad was on the lookout for three people. “I was looking for that profile, but I was also looking for John,” Muhammad said in an interview Tuesday.
April 13, 2021 ~ Mildred Muhammad is the ex-wife of the D.C. sniper John A. Muhammad who went on a three-week rampage with the intent to ultimately find and kill her too. Ms. Muhammad shared her personal experience involving fear and abuse, and what it's like to be a victim and survivor of domestic violence "without scars."
April 8, 2021 ~ Mildred Muhammad shares her personal experience involving fear and abuse, and what it's like to be a victim and survivor of domestic violence "without scars". She will describe "Strengthening, Healing, & Empowering Ourselves After Trauma".
Feb 14, 2020 ~ On Valentine’s Day, the former wife of Beltway sniper John Allen Muhammad shared her story of domestic abuse in one of the communities where Muhammad and partner Lee Boyd Malvo killed 10 strangers in 2002.
BALTIMORE (WJZ)–The ex-wife of the DC sniper is asking the General Assembly to pass a bill expanding protections for victims of domestic violence.
May 29, 2017 ~ In October 2002, a series of related shootings throughout Virginia, Maryland and Washington, D.C. were carried out by 42-year-old John Allen Muhammad and 17-year-old Lee Boyd Malvo. Ten people were killed and three others were injured. The shootings became known as the D.C. or Beltway sniper attacks. Muhammad was sentenced to death while Malvo was sentenced to six consecutive life sentences without the possibility of parole.