Eulalio Tordil

Eulalio Tordil

Suspect arrested in D.C.-area for killing wife, 2 others

BETHESDA, Md. — Documents show the woman police say was killed by her estranged husband outside a Maryland high school had previously told authorities he threatened to harm her if she left him.

According to a protective order obtained by The Washington Post, Gladys Tordil said Eulalio Tordil once slapped her so hard that her glasses broke on her face.

In the protective order, Gladys Tordil said Eulalio, an employee of the Federal Protective Service, subjected their children to “intense-military-like discipline,” like pushups and detention in a dark closet.

Eulalio, 62, was arrested Friday, police said. He is also suspected in 2 other fatal shootings.

Police in the Maryland suburbs said shortly before 3 p.m. that 62-year-old Eulalio Tordil had been taken into custody without incident.

While working at the Federal Protective Service, which provides security at federal properties, Tordil was put on administrative duties in March after a protective order was issued against him.

Police said he followed 44-year-old Gladys Tordil to their children’s Beltsville’s High Point High School on Thursday and shot her. He also shot and wounded a man who tried to intervene.

At the Westfield Montgomery Mall in Bethesda, about 10 miles northwest of downtown Washington D.C., one person was initially shot and two others may have been shot coming to that person’s aid, said Montgomery County Police Assistant Chief Darryl McSwain. There’s no reason to believe the victims knew the shooter, he said.

A man died and another one is in critical condition, Montgomery County police spokesman Capt. Paul Starks said. A woman has injuries that are not life-threatening.

About a half an hour later, police were called to a shooting at a Giant Food store in Aspen Hill, about 5 miles away. Police later tweeted that a woman died after that shooting.

For a time, all Montgomery County schools were sheltering in place at the request of police, but schools officials later tweeted that all but five schools would dismiss on time.

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