Hillsborough, N.C. - Many of Mohammed Taheri-azar's victims have recovered from their injuries, but they are still dealing with emotional problems more than two years after he drove a rented Jeep into a UNC-Chapel Hill gathering place.
The frightening sights and sounds of the March 3, 2006, attack have not left Julian Wooten. He was in The Pit at the time.
"The Jeep swerved and then it sped up, and you could hear screams of people being hit," he recalled. "For a long time afterwards, it was really hard to be outside and to be, like, in a common area because you didn't know if that was going to be the only thing that would happen."
Taheri-azar's drawn-out legal proceedings did not help Wooten get over those fears. Read more ...
The frightening sights and sounds of the March 3, 2006, attack have not left Julian Wooten. He was in The Pit at the time.
"The Jeep swerved and then it sped up, and you could hear screams of people being hit," he recalled. "For a long time afterwards, it was really hard to be outside and to be, like, in a common area because you didn't know if that was going to be the only thing that would happen."
Taheri-azar's drawn-out legal proceedings did not help Wooten get over those fears. Read more ...
Source: WRAL
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