And I was like, that’s kinda weird that someone wouldn’t wait for a red light,” Watts told Van Sant. The next thing they saw was a car speeding away into oncoming traffic. Watts and his friend Angjelo Rama were driving together when they heard those five pops behind them. “I hear five rapid shots, kinda like a ‘pop, pop, pop, pop, pop,’” said Kevin Watts. Five shots were fired with remarkable accuracy and the shooter killed Yancy Noll just a few feet from other motorists. The details of this shooting were curious, to say the least. “You think he ever knew what hit him?” Van Sant asked. “It’s possible that there was some sort of confrontation and Yancy pulled up to the intersection thinking nothing of it,” said Kenny. Investigators suspect Noll and his killer crossed paths around 7 p.m. “He was so careful and mindful with how he interacted with people.” “He had a Subaru wagon, not known for its speed.Īsked if Noll was angry, impulsive or reckless,” Kenny said “no.” He was very, very careful,” Brad Kenny, a longtime friend, said. Yancy Noll and Lolaīottom line: Yancy Noll, 42, was a good-natured, happy-go-lucky guy and friends say the idea that he exploded into a road rage battle is ridiculous. Loved what he did, working as a wine steward at QFC,” she replied. “From talking to his friends, Yancy didn’t have any enemies.”He was an outdoorsy guy who enjoyed fine wine. “What were you hearing? Did Yancy Noll have any enemies?” Van Sant asked Grande. We don’t necessarily have many shootings in that area of Seattle. “This was a very big story,” she told Van Sant. They took it very seriously,” said Richardson.Īlison Grande is a reporter for KIRO-7, a CBS News affiliate. “It was like a bomb had dropped,” said Richardson. “This case is about the presence of evil in our world,” said McCoy. King County prosecutors Adrienne McCoy and Kristin Richardson say the murder of Yancy Noll - shot to death in his car while stopped at a red light - put the city of Seattle on edge. “He had no way of knowing he was going to be dead in 10 minutes.” At some point, he encountered a man in a BMW,” Prosecutor Kristin Richardson told “48 Hours” correspondent Peter Van Sant. He started driving his battered old Subaru up Interstate 5. 31, 2012, when Yancy Noll left work and headed home. (CBS NEWS) SEATTLE - “It was early evening of Aug. Produced by Paul LaRosa and Jonathan Leach
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