New details about the Feb. 1 shooting at the Potomac Avenue Metro station came out in an arrest affidavit released ahead of Isaiah Trotman’s first court appearance.
Isaiah Trotman had just shot a man and forced him onto the mezzanine level of the Potomac Avenue Metro station at gunpoint. Then he had turned his attention to a woman on the platform. “I’ll shoot you,” Trotman told her. “I am God.”
The woman told detectives that Trotman, 31, pointed his gun at her feet, and said, “Don’t fucking bat your pretty eyelashes at me.” Another witness said Trotman was yelling, “I’m a killer.”
It was just after 9:20 a.m. on Wednesday, Feb. 1. And while Trotman’s attention was focused on the woman, Robert Cunningham decided to act.
The woman told police that as Trotman pointed his gun at her, someone came up from behind and “tackled him.” Then she heard a gunshot and saw a man lying on the ground.
Security cameras show Cunningham, 64 and wearing a safety vest, grab Trotman from behind “in an apparent choke hold.” Trotman then reached up and pointed the gun toward Cunningham’s head, and he immediately fell to the ground. Trotman stomped on Cunningham’s motionless body at least three times, security cameras show. Cunningham was a mechanic and had worked for Metro for 20 years.
These new details of the horrific shooting spree at the Metro station come from an arrest affidavit filed in D.C. Superior Court Tuesday ahead of Trotman’s initial appearance. In court, Trotman’s public defender, Joseph Yarbough, and Assistant U.S. Attorney Michelle Jackson argued over whether Trotman’s actions amounted to kidnapping, which is related to his charge of felony murder. Yarbough noted that Trotman had graduated from Auburn University and served in the military. Jackson said Trotman was awaiting sentencing for a drug distribution charge in Pennsylvania. Judge Lloyd Nolan ordered Trotman held without bond. He’s charged with first-degree murder while armed.
In all, Trotman is accused of shooting three people that day. Before the shooting on the Metro platform, Trotman targeted a man on the M6 Metrobus as it arrived at the Potomac Avenue station.
“Look me in the face. I’m a prophet, you going to die with me today,” Trotman told the bus rider. “The last dude I shot earlier this morning was sitting in the same seat you was in.” (Police say they found no evidence of a prior shooting.)
Trotman ordered the man off the bus and asked, “You ready? You ready?” The man ran off the bus, and Trotman shot him in the leg before descending into the station, the arrest affidavit says.
After he shot Cunningham, Trotman boarded a Silver Line train full of people, still holding the gun. He warned them not to leave and not to run. A witness said Trotman paced up and down the train car and said “Harriet Tubman was in the CIA” and “I am a veteran.” He eventually sat down and placed the gun on the seat next to him, resting his hand on top of it.
As the doors opened again, Shante Trumpet, identified as “Victim 4” in the police affidavit, grabbed the gun and ran. Trumpet, a D.C. government employee, described to reporters last week how she dropped the weapon as Trotman pulled her to the ground. She slid it away from him across the floor as other passengers came to her aid. After a brief struggle, she broke free of Trotman’s grasp. Then she tossed the gun over a train on the opposite side of the platform.
The arrest affidavit says D.C. police received a request for a welfare check on Trotman on Jan. 19. The person reported that Trotman has a “behavioral health disorder” and was supposed to attend a treatment program three times a week, but had recently missed some appointments. Officers received no response at his listed address, a house on 41st Place SE.
Trotman is scheduled to appear in court again on Feb. 16.
