Pubdate: Sat, 05 June 1999
Source: Washington Post (DC)
Copyright: 1999 The Washington Post Company
Address: 1150 15th Street Northwest, Washington, DC 20071
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Website: http://www.washingtonpost.com/
Author: Steven Gray and Martin Weil, Washington Post Staff Writers
Note: Staff writers Maria Elena Fernandez and Allan Lengel contributed to
this report.

CAPITOL HILL ACTIVIST SLAIN VICTIM IDENTIFIED AS ANC MEMBER

Dennis Dolinger, an advisory neighborhood commissioner and a veteran
community activist who had worked to curb crime in his area, was found slain
yesterday inside his row house on the eastern edge of Capitol Hill.

Police said Dolinger, believed to be in his early fifties, was found about 5
p.m. at 1516 Potomac Ave. SE after police received a call telling them that
a man had been shot in the head. Investigators remained at the house, near
the Potomac Avenue Metro station, late into the night. However, no cause of
death was released, and sources said he may have been beaten.

Neighbors said Dolinger had occasionally been harassed, but police gave no
motive in the killing and said they had made no arrests.

"It's a wide-open case," a police spokesman said. 

Neighbors, other Advisory Neighborhood Commission members and D.C. Council
member Sharon Ambrose (D-Ward 6) said Dolinger had retired or gone on leave
recently from the Metro transit system, where he had been a budget analyst.

Neighbors said he had attended a community anti-crime meeting Thursday night
at the 1st District police substation on Capitol Hill.

"It's a real loss of a hard-core community worker who was really about
building a strong community policing effort in this neighborhood," Ambrose said.

"This is a huge loss," said a neighbor, Jack Calhoun. "He was one of the
most committed neighbors we ever had."

Police gave no indication of any motive. A neighbor, Jim Meyers, said
Dolinger had had been robbed several times while living at a previous
address, also on the eastern edge of Capitol Hill.

Police said there was no sign of forced entry at his current house, a
two-story structure with a front porch roof held up by square brick columns.

According to those who knew him, Dolinger had headed the Orange Hat Patrol,
a citizen anti-crime unit, in his neighborhood, worked closely with the
police department and was prominent in efforts to deal with abandoned and
untended houses and lots.

"Community work was his love," said Beth Purcell, who worked on neighborhood
projects with him. "If you needed to get something done, he was on the short
list."

Ambrose said Dolinger had lived in the neighborhood for about 20 years and
moved to the Potomac Avenue address two or three years ago.

"He was well-known," said Meyers, "one of the most visible leaders in the
campaign against drugs and guns" in his section of Capitol Hill. "He was at
all the meetings."

Ambrose said that Dolinger's efforts to dislodge drug dealers from the
neighborhood inevitably created some friction. "It's true of a lot of people
who live in communities really troubled by active drug dealing," she said.

A neighbor said Dolinger had recently told her about being harassed while
working to improve a nearby park. Ambrose said that Dolinger was an ANC
member who represented one of the single-member districts in ANC 6B, one of
the three commissions within Ward 6. ANCs were created by law to advise the
city's administrative bodies and take positions on such matters as zoning
and alcoholic beverage licenses.

Dolinger was first elected to the ANC in 1992. 

Staff writers Maria Elena Fernandez and Allan Lengel contributed to this report.

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