Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Journalist remembered; threats revealed

- Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Talia Richman, Catherine Rentz and Ian Duncan of The Baltimore Sun; and by David McFadden of The Associated Press.

OWINGS MILLS, Md. — Days after journalist Rob Hiaasen and four colleagues were shot to death by a gunman who blasted his way into the Capital Gazette’s newsroom, an overflow crowd gathered on Monday evening to remember him.

Attendees at the “celebratio­n of life” held at a Maryland nature center said they would remember Hiaasen for how he lived, rather than the way he died. They sought solace with laughter and funny memories, but sobs occasional­ly punctuated the ceremony.

“I want to just remember what a wonderful person Rob was and what a great, wonderful, selfless life he led,” said Kevin Cowherd, one of several speakers who addressed the crowd of roughly 500 people assembled beneath a large white tent.

Meanwhile, Maryland police investigat­ing America’s latest mass murder said Monday that Jarrod Ramos, the man charged with the slayings, sent three threatenin­g letters on the day of the attack. Sgt. Jacklyn Davis, a spokesman for Anne Arundel County police, said the letters were received Monday.

Tom Marquardt, the onetime publisher of the Capital Gazette, told The Associated Press at Hiaasen’s memorial that Ramos sent one letter to a company lawyer saying he was on his way to the Annapolis newspaper “to kill as many people” as he could. The letter dated June 28 — the day of the deadly attack — was sent to Robert C. Douglas, a lawyer for the newspaper, Marquardt said.

“In that letter, he was talking to the appeals court judge and suggesting that he didn’t do a very good job on the case and as a result he was going to have to take out his vengeance in a different way,” Marquardt said.

Letters were also sent to a Baltimore judge, as well as a judge at the Maryland Court of Special Appeals.

Earlier Monday on the Today show, a woman recounted the online harassment and threats that led her to file a criminal harassment charge against Ramos.

The woman said she was terrified for years that Ramos would “show up anywhere, at any time, and kill me.”

Her interview aired just days after the massacre of five employees at the Capital Gazette — which ran an article in 2011 about his harassment charge, setting off a yearslong feud between Ramos and the Annapolis newspaper.

The woman, whose full identity was withheld out of safety concerns, said she was hit with a wave of panic when she heard about last week’s shooting in the newspaper office. She thought it might be Ramos.

“He is very cold,” she said. “He is very calculated.”

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