Alleged Assault On W& OD Trail Highlights Risks
Caution Urged After Sundown
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Thursday, August 2, 2007; Page LZ03
As the population of Northern Virginia has boomed, so has traffic on the 45-mile Washington & Old Dominion Trail, resulting in several fatal bicycle accidents and warnings by park officials that joggers, cyclists, pedestrians, skaters and horseback riders should follow safety guidelines.
But until last week, when an Ashburn woman reported an attempted sexual assault on the trail at 11:15 p.m., little attention was paid to the potential dangers that lurk after sundown, when the trail is closed.
"It's just not safe out there after dark," said Paul McCray, operations director for the Northern Virginia Regional Park Authority, which manages the trail. "Being on the trail is not any different than being alone and isolated anywhere late at night, such as a dark parking lot at a shopping mall. You know, if there's someone around who's going to try something, those are the areas they're going to look for."
The Loudoun County Sheriff's Office is investigating the Ashburn woman's report that she was attacked by two men July 26.
"She said they came up from behind her while she was on her bike, knocked her down and tried to sexually assault her," sheriff's department spokesman Kraig Troxell said. "She says she screamed, then heard someone else scream, off in the distance, and that's when the two men fled."
A search by sheriff's deputies and dogs and a Fairfax County police helicopter did not turn up any suspects. Sheriff's investigators planned to interview the woman again this week.
The W&OD trail, which runs from the Shirlington neighborhood of Arlington County to Purcellville in Loudoun, has a reputation as a safe and scenic refuge from city life during the day.
But park rangers do not patrol the trail at night, and deputies and police officers from the eight jurisdictions along the paved pathway do not routinely venture into the area after sundown, McCray said. The dawn-to-dusk curfew is rarely enforced, according to park authority and sheriff's department officials.
"So we advise people not to ride out there after dark, not only from a security standpoint, but also a safety standpoint," McCray said. "It's not lit. It's a narrow trail, 10 feet wide. Even during the day it's easy to wander off the trail, and at night you can't even see the edges of the trail very well."
McCray said he has received occasional reports of people being spotted on the trail late at night.
"I've heard of kids in Fairfax who were out there partying on the trail at night," he said. "And police have questioned some other people about what they were doing out there. They might have seemed suspicious. It is typical during the first half-hour after dark to see some cyclists that just didn't make it back to their cars on time. The trail is really flat and easy to ride, and sometimes people go further than they had planned."
Troxell said Loudoun deputies have made three arrests on the trail in recent years, only one of them after dark.


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