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District of Columbia
Related: About this forumPolice accuse grandfather, 70, in BASE jumps from area skyscrapers
Since when does DC have skyscrapers?
Parker Molloy Retweeted
Police accuse Chuck Moeser, 70, of being "extremely cool"
Link to tweet
Local Crime & Public Safety
Police accuse grandfather, 70, in BASE jumps from area skyscrapers
By Justin Jouvenal
Today at 2:27 p.m. EST
Two years ago, authorities named a then 68-year-old grandfather as the prime suspect in several brazen BASE jumps from some of the D.C. areas tallest buildings.
The investigation into Chuck Moeser, a formerly elite and flamboyant local runner, was featured in a front-page story in The Washington Post. But the statute of limitations for trespassing expired as Fairfax County police were building a case. If Moeser was the jumper, he got away with as many as six leaps, including a harrowing 32-story plunge over evening traffic.
Despite the police probe and public exposure, police think Moeser, now 70, returned to the Tysons area to parachute again. Fairfax County police arrested him Monday night in connection with leaps from buildings on the Capital One campus near the McLean Metro station that occurred this year and last.
Moeser has been charged with three counts of misdemeanor trespassing. Police said his son Lee Moeser has also been charged in connection with a jump last year. BASE jumping, which involves parachute leaps from tall structures, is not a crime in Virginia, but authorities try to discourage it because it often results in fatalities and can injure people below.
{snip}
Moeser was interviewed by The Washington Post in 1987 before competing in the Marine Corps Marathon. He said that as a young man he was drafted into the Army, where military records show he received training as a Ranger, parachutist and military skier in the early 1970s.
That was probably the best thing that ever happened to me, Moeser told The Post of being drafted. Id have either been the president of a company or in jail by now. I had a lot of extra energy. Thats probably the reason I run so much now.
Now, he could go to jail. Each trespassing charge carries a fine and a sentence of up to 12 months behind bars.
Gift Article
https://wapo.st/3IThfO0
By Justin Jouvenal
Justin Jouvenal covers courts and policing in Fairfax County and across the nation. He joined The Post in 2009. Twitter https://twitter.com/jjouvenal
Police accuse grandfather, 70, in BASE jumps from area skyscrapers
By Justin Jouvenal
Today at 2:27 p.m. EST
Two years ago, authorities named a then 68-year-old grandfather as the prime suspect in several brazen BASE jumps from some of the D.C. areas tallest buildings.
The investigation into Chuck Moeser, a formerly elite and flamboyant local runner, was featured in a front-page story in The Washington Post. But the statute of limitations for trespassing expired as Fairfax County police were building a case. If Moeser was the jumper, he got away with as many as six leaps, including a harrowing 32-story plunge over evening traffic.
Despite the police probe and public exposure, police think Moeser, now 70, returned to the Tysons area to parachute again. Fairfax County police arrested him Monday night in connection with leaps from buildings on the Capital One campus near the McLean Metro station that occurred this year and last.
Moeser has been charged with three counts of misdemeanor trespassing. Police said his son Lee Moeser has also been charged in connection with a jump last year. BASE jumping, which involves parachute leaps from tall structures, is not a crime in Virginia, but authorities try to discourage it because it often results in fatalities and can injure people below.
{snip}
Moeser was interviewed by The Washington Post in 1987 before competing in the Marine Corps Marathon. He said that as a young man he was drafted into the Army, where military records show he received training as a Ranger, parachutist and military skier in the early 1970s.
That was probably the best thing that ever happened to me, Moeser told The Post of being drafted. Id have either been the president of a company or in jail by now. I had a lot of extra energy. Thats probably the reason I run so much now.
Now, he could go to jail. Each trespassing charge carries a fine and a sentence of up to 12 months behind bars.
Gift Article
https://wapo.st/3IThfO0
By Justin Jouvenal
Justin Jouvenal covers courts and policing in Fairfax County and across the nation. He joined The Post in 2009. Twitter https://twitter.com/jjouvenal
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Police accuse grandfather, 70, in BASE jumps from area skyscrapers (Original Post)
mahatmakanejeeves
Dec 2021
OP
brush
(57,495 posts)1. They won't convict him. They should give him a medal and book...
contract on how to live a vital and energized life at that age.
stopdiggin
(12,822 posts)2. to each his own
I'd feel a little more charitable here if this man's passion didn't involve infringing on a lot of other lives (emergency personnel, LE, property owners, etc.) Other hand - the article did mention "flamboyant" - so that's probably part of the deal.
IronLionZion
(46,968 posts)3. Tysons has much taller buildings than the district
The district rarely goes higher than 14 stories but this dude jumped from the Lumen building which is 32 stories.
IronLionZion
(46,968 posts)4. They're discussing him on the radio 101.1 right now
he's apparently known for this locally and has been doing this for years. They get him on trespassing or blocking traffic since there is no law against base jumping. He's a risky thrill seeker. It's very dangerous.