Fire in upper NW?

Anonymous
News reports indicate a long history of offenses that include threats of violence again family members. I don't understand why he hasn't been locked up for an extended time.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:In custody:

https://twitter.com/shomaristone/status/601585945574567936


<3 <3 <3
Anonymous
Great job law enforcement!!!
Anonymous
THANK GOD. Before he could kill anyone else.

The fact that he didn't kill anyone else really makes me wonder. This seemed so personal.

But at least he's caught.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Fox5 reporting now. 10th and RI NE.


Was in hotel on Route 1. tVo in car following truck, truck driven by brother, truck had lots of cash in it. Wint in car, possibly driven by woman.
Anonymous
You know, it's a truly sick and scary thing that happened here, but just some stupid thud was able to penetrate an uber rich family and still commit this atrocious act. The earlier theories of business deals gone wrong was almost "understandable" since we don't understand this lifestyle or anything in this $$. I think this adds to the terror everyone felt. One stupid thud who ordered pizza that did him in- in this huge mansion with multiple maids. I am in not in that realm of $ but feel vulnerable no doubt.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2015/may/21/dc-murder-suspect-daron-wint-threatened-own-family/

The father of Daron Wint, the man suspected of killing a Northwest D.C. couple, their young son, and their housekeeper, had been so frightened by threats his son made to shoot his own family that he sought a protective order barring the man from contacting them for a year.

Maryland court records show that over the last decade Mr. Wint has been the subject of numerous peace and protective orders.






ok, butthat was a decade ago and stemmed mostly from him standing in the front yard or on the porch making threats. he has two convictions one for assualt (6 monthe sentence) and one for destroying property (none for sexual assualt - that is media confusing him with his brother)

he was in the marines and is a certified welder. peopel who knew him say they are shocked. His family was by the accounts of a neighbor normal and hardworking. He isn't a lowlife thug - he seems to have had options in his life. Good god that he chose this option. Leave the damn kid alive and unhurt.


OMG of course he was a lowlife thug. What you listed is my definition.


lowlife thugs have little to no employment history outside criminal activities. It is what they do. This guy had two relatively minor convictions, served no jail time (his six months sentence was suspended) and has a past in the military and a very markable skill (certified welder) for which he had been to post secondary school of some type. He wasn't a lowlife thug or a career criminal. I don't know why people want to call him that. the boston bomber guy wasn't a lowlife thug. the guy who killed all those people in teh movei theater wans't a lowlife thug. Doesn't diminish what he did, but he really doesn't fit the description


You are either delusional or a sociopath yourself. Can't get more lowlife thug than this:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3091976/I-ll-drop-one-one-chilling-threat-prime-suspect-DC-family-murder-accused-making-landlord-told-woman-m-good-knife.html
Anonymous
Good Job LE!!!Glad no one else was killed!!!
Anonymous
I love that dcum focused in on the brother yesterday and thought he would be involved. This board has some noise but it also has a lot of smart people on it!
Anonymous
As a husband and father of 3 children, 2 teenage daughters and and an 11 year old son, this story has hit home in a big way. Although I am a senior level executive for a Fortune 500 Company, I am confident that my financial resources aren't in the realm of Mr. S and his family. From everything I have read, watched and heard over the past week about this family, I've concluded that, although no family is perfect and one can never really know what goes on behind closed doors, that this family did not somehow "ask" for this or "have this coming" in any way. I can understand the posts concerning the gut-wrenching difficulty of just how bad the last night of these people's lives most-likely were. Think about what you would endure for your child and the lengths that you would take to get them out of harm's way, damn the cost or consequences for your self. Just KNOWING the kind of superhuman strength these parents would have most definitely fought for the life of their little boy and it's unbearable and incomprehensible what went on inside that house.

I actually sat down with my family this evening to point out how many times Mr. S seemed to be complying with his captor(s) demands while trying to send subtle messages that something was terribly wrong:

The voicemail to N telling her not to come in tomorrow after she had just seen him and was a 360 degree departure from the plan/schedule they'd just discussed mere a few hours prior (Amy is going out, see you tomorrow to Amy has been sick in bed all day, your housekeeper is spending the night and don't come tomorrow.

It seems likely that Mrs. F husband would have called Nellie when his wife didn't come home to ask about her whereabouts.

Dropping the "your wife took Amy to the hospital" when he came knocking Thursday knowing that she didn't know how to drive and spoke little English. Everyone is different but if my wife were scheduled to be home in the afternoon and I couldn't contact here as nightfall approached, I wouldn't be hitting the sack.

$40,000 isn't a lot of money for the size of the business but it's an ENORMOUS amount of cash. Even when our executives need cash, a check request must be signed, a DIFFERENT person must cut the chuck and whomever cut it cannot be 1 of the 2 signatures on the check itself made out to "cash" from the appropriate operating account. Also, even if the assistant had no CLUE what he was leaving at the door, the person who went to the bank and gave it to the assistant to deliver it would have been putting that person in a dangerous situation without security to accompany him/her.
All that said, this is probably a reflection of his reputation and character that everyone involved in the chain of events to get the money delivered and assumed it was legit and knew what he was doing, not to mention that he probably had the authority to do it in the first place.

The flurry of phone calls (banker, construction executive, housekeeper, other hosekeeper's husband, sister, American Iron Works and possibly others, should have at least had them talking -- although, if these people weren't connected, each instant on its face value would peak curiosity, but not panic/concern/danger. But I hope someone is rallying around these people, letting them know that this isn't their fault, it's this murder's fault.
Anonymous
According to this article,

"The suspect wanted over the quadruple homicide in Washington once allegedly gave his landlords the chilling warning: 'I'll drop you one by one' in a row over parking space.
Daily Mail Online can reveal that Daron Wint is said to have left Raymonde Descollines and her husband Efton in fear of their lives when he dramatically escalated the everyday dispute.
The episode was one of many instances in Wint's life which form a pattern of alleged violence and suggest he was unafraid to use intimidation to get what he wanted.
In 2005 his own father took out a court order banning him from having contact with anyone in his immediate family because he threatened them.
Wint, a failed Marine who didn't pass boot camp, also allegedly told one woman who he [argued] with: 'I'm going to come over there and kill you, your daughter and your friends'.


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3091976/I-ll-drop-one-one-chilling-threat-prime-suspect-DC-family-murder-accused-making-landlord-told-woman-m-good-knife.html#ixzz3apqxCbnX
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:News reports indicate a long history of offenses that include threats of violence again family members. I don't understand why he hasn't been locked up for an extended time.


He has a long record but mostly for making extreme threats but not actually following through on the threats. So he was ordered to stay away from the people he had threatened, but was not locked up.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:As a husband and father of 3 children, 2 teenage daughters and and an 11 year old son, this story has hit home in a big way. Although I am a senior level executive for a Fortune 500 Company, I am confident that my financial resources aren't in the realm of Mr. S and his family. From everything I have read, watched and heard over the past week about this family, I've concluded that, although no family is perfect and one can never really know what goes on behind closed doors, that this family did not somehow "ask" for this or "have this coming" in any way. I can understand the posts concerning the gut-wrenching difficulty of just how bad the last night of these people's lives most-likely were. Think about what you would endure for your child and the lengths that you would take to get them out of harm's way, damn the cost or consequences for your self. Just KNOWING the kind of superhuman strength these parents would have most definitely fought for the life of their little boy and it's unbearable and incomprehensible what went on inside that house.

I actually sat down with my family this evening to point out how many times Mr. S seemed to be complying with his captor(s) demands while trying to send subtle messages that something was terribly wrong:

The voicemail to N telling her not to come in tomorrow after she had just seen him and was a 360 degree departure from the plan/schedule they'd just discussed mere a few hours prior (Amy is going out, see you tomorrow to Amy has been sick in bed all day, your housekeeper is spending the night and don't come tomorrow.

It seems likely that Mrs. F husband would have called Nellie when his wife didn't come home to ask about her whereabouts.

Dropping the "your wife took Amy to the hospital" when he came knocking Thursday knowing that she didn't know how to drive and spoke little English. Everyone is different but if my wife were scheduled to be home in the afternoon and I couldn't contact here as nightfall approached, I wouldn't be hitting the sack.

$40,000 isn't a lot of money for the size of the business but it's an ENORMOUS amount of cash. Even when our executives need cash, a check request must be signed, a DIFFERENT person must cut the chuck and whomever cut it cannot be 1 of the 2 signatures on the check itself made out to "cash" from the appropriate operating account. Also, even if the assistant had no CLUE what he was leaving at the door, the person who went to the bank and gave it to the assistant to deliver it would have been putting that person in a dangerous situation without security to accompany him/her.
All that said, this is probably a reflection of his reputation and character that everyone involved in the chain of events to get the money delivered and assumed it was legit and knew what he was doing, not to mention that he probably had the authority to do it in the first place.

The flurry of phone calls (banker, construction executive, housekeeper, other hosekeeper's husband, sister, American Iron Works and possibly others, should have at least had them talking -- although, if these people weren't connected, each instant on its face value would peak curiosity, but not panic/concern/danger. But I hope someone is rallying around these people, letting them know that this isn't their fault, it's this murder's fault.



As a business owner, I am concerned that while your intentions may have been good, this is too much information about certain parts of this story.

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:According to this article,

"The suspect wanted over the quadruple homicide in Washington once allegedly gave his landlords the chilling warning: 'I'll drop you one by one' in a row over parking space.
Daily Mail Online can reveal that Daron Wint is said to have left Raymonde Descollines and her husband Efton in fear of their lives when he dramatically escalated the everyday dispute.
The episode was one of many instances in Wint's life which form a pattern of alleged violence and suggest he was unafraid to use intimidation to get what he wanted.
In 2005 his own father took out a court order banning him from having contact with anyone in his immediate family because he threatened them.
Wint, a failed Marine who didn't pass boot camp, also allegedly told one woman who he [argued] with: 'I'm going to come over there and kill you, your daughter and your friends'.


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3091976/I-ll-drop-one-one-chilling-threat-prime-suspect-DC-family-murder-accused-making-landlord-told-woman-m-good-knife.html#ixzz3apqxCbnX




And the daughter he referenced was 2 years old at the time.

I hope this shit, excuse me in my disgust, lives forever in prison because he'll be tortured everyday. Kind of grateful no death sentence in DC. Just this once because that would be too easy for me.
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