Youngest victim testifies at sniper trial
Virginia Beach, Va. ? The only child shot during last year’s sniper spree calmly told a jury his story Wednesday in remarkably succinct fashion: “I put my book bag down, and I got shot.”
Iran Brown, 14, was cut down by a bullet on his way to his middle school in Bowie, Md., last October. He recalled the horror of the shooting during two minutes of testimony at John Allen Muhammad’s murder trial, answering prosecutors’ questions in a relaxed, matter-of-fact manner.
“I walked out (of the car) and I put my book bag down, and I got shot,” the boy told the jury.
After the shooting, Iran walked back to his aunt’s car, who drove him to a nearby urgent care treatment center.
Tanya Brown, the aunt, testified that she was dropping Iran off at school because he had been barred from the school bus for a few days for eating candy.
She said she heard a loud noise, and then heard Iran calling for her.
“He told me, ‘I’ve been shot.’ I didn’t believe him at first,” she said. Then she saw a hole in his shirt and a dark stain.
Brown, a nurse, said she made the decision to drive her nephew to the urgent care center almost instinctively.
She wept on the stand while prosecutors played the 911 tape in which she calmly explained to the dispatcher that she was driving Iran to the clinic, with his cries audible in the background. At one point, she told the boy, “You’re not going to die.”
“He told me that he loved me,” she said.
Martin Eichelberger, the doctor at Children’s Hospital in Washington who later operated on the boy, said he removed the spleen and parts of his liver and pancreas. But the bullet that entered Brown’s left chest missed the heart and lungs.
Iran, who was not cross-examined by defense lawyers, testified that the shooting “brought me closer to God.”
A police cadet also testified Wednesday that he found a ball-point pen barrel in a field less than 100 yards from the shooting scene. Court records indicate that Muhammad’s DNA was on that barrel.
Muhammad and fellow sniper suspect Lee Boyd Malvo have been accused of shooting 19 people, killing 13 and wounding six in Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, Maryland, Virginia and Washington, D.C. Malvo goes on trial next month.
In other testimony Wednesday, a Baltimore police officer said he encountered Muhammad on Oct. 8, the day after the Brown shooting. The officer, James Snyder, said Muhammad was sleeping in his Chevrolet Caprice while parked at a service station.
The officer ordered Muhammad out of the car, but let him go after Muhammad produced a Washington state driver’s license.
Snyder is the third officer to testify that he encountered Muhammad during the sniper spree.

