D.C. Sniper: 23 Days of Fear

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USA Network promotional image for the D.C. Sniper: 23 Days of Fear T.V. movie based on the sniper attacks.
USA Network promotional image for the D.C. Sniper: 23 Days of Fear T.V. movie based on the sniper attacks.

D.C. Sniper: 23 Days of Fear (AKA 'Sniper: 23 Days of Fear in Washington D.C.') is a 2003 made-for-TV movie created by USA Network based on the Beltway sniper attacks of 2002.

The movie chronicles the period when John Allen Muhammad (played by Bobby Hosea) and Lee Boyd Malvo (played by Trent Cameron) went on a serial shooting spree in October 2002 in Virginia, Washington, DC, and Maryland, all parts of the Washington Metropolitan Area, the entire area of which was held in a grip of terror.

The protagonist is Charles Moose (played by Charles S. Dutton), police chief of Montgomery County, Maryland, who is one of those heading the efforts to track down the snipers.

Unable to give anything but small pieces of information at various press conferences held during the 23 dark days, Moose finds himself vilified and derided in many corners as ineffectual and incompetent.

Indeed, quite a few newspapers outside the area targeted by snipers came right out and called for Moose's resignation. But the chief's dogged persistence ultimately paid off and — in the sort of twist that a professional writer of thrillers might dismiss as inconceivable — the two men arrested for the carnage turned out to be the archetypal "least likely suspects.

It first aired on October 17, 2003. (John Allen Muhammad and John Lee Malvo's murder trials had just gotten underway.)

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