.
Feedback

Fairfax 'Butt Slasher' in Custody in Northern Virginia

U.S. Marshals Service brought suspect Johnny Pimentel into custody from Peru, where he was arrested in January, police said.

Update 6:58 p.m.: In a statement Tuesday night, Fairfax County police said Johnny Pimentel, the man accused of stabbing 13 women across the buttocks in 2011, has been charged with six counts of malicious wounding, two counts of attempted malicious wounding and one count of forging a public document.

Pimentel is being held at the Fairfax County Adult Detenion Center, the release said.

Original 5:58 p.m. The man who terrorized women across Fairfax County for six months in 2011 by slashing them from behind with a box cutter while they were shopping is in custody in Northern Virginia, according to Fairfax County Police.

Johnny Pimentel, arrested in January in Peru, was released to the U.S. Marshals Service in Peru and was brought to Northern Virginia Tuesday, police confirmed.

In all, the suspect in the crimes slashed 13 women — including one woman who was pregnant— across their buttocks while they were shopping at area shopping centers including the Greenbriar Shopping Center and Fairfax Towne Center in in Fairfax. The attacks took place between February and July 2011.

"In each case, the suspect distracts his victim before cutting them. The victims have all been teenaged women or in their early 20s," Fairfax County Police said in a statement last year.

See past stories about the serial slasher on Patch:

Police Looking for Serial Slasher

Three More Victims of the Butt Slasher Step Forward

More stories about the Butt Slasher

Newsletter & Alerts

Get the best stories each day and important breaking news

Subscribe

Not from Chantilly Patch? Find your Local Patch »

Note Article
Just a short thought to get the word out quickly about anything in your neighborhood.
Share something with your neighbors. Write a new post... What's up? Make an announcement, speak your mind, or sell something
Charles Kuhman April 5, 2013 at 07:18 pm
I have worked at the Herndon polls on several occasions, and I would like to make sure everyoneRead More understands what Fairfax County and the State of Virginina already require poll workers to do to combat voter fraud. The requirements that people work in their own precincts among their neighbors is to make the likelihood of someone committing voter fraud small at best. We are to stay there all day (5:30 am until the vote count is complete, usually a full hour after the polls close at the earliest) as another check on the chance of someone voting more than once or under more than one name. Both parties are represented among the poll workers by design to even out the chances of at least one worker knowing anyone who might walk in to vote. I have yet to work in a precinct where at least some volunteer poll watchers weren't present for either or both parties (and for all three parties in the election that include Ross Perot) for some or all of the voting hours. Poll workers are instructed on how to challenge a ballot, and I have had to do this myself on at least one occasion. A challenged ballot is sealed and kept, and after the election a panel makes a decision as to whether the ballot will be unsealed and counted. In most cases, the election is clearly won or lost without the challenged ballots, and they are destroyed unopened. I say all this to assure everyone that I feel large scale voter fraud is very unlikely. The need for other measures is unnecessary.