'Let the savage inside me out': Man murdered, dismembered beloved elementary school teacher walking in park

Harold Francis Landon III and Mariame Toure Sylla

Left: Harold Francis Landon III (Prince George”s County police). Right: Mariame Toure Sylla (Greenbelt police).

A Maryland jury convicted a 34-year-old man of first-degree murder in the death of a beloved elementary school teacher whom he killed and dismembered after attacking her while she was going for a walk in a park.

Among the key pieces of evidence that swayed jurors toward a guilty verdict for Harold Francis Landon III in the death of 59-year-old Mariame Toure Sylla was a recorded jail call he made that prosecutors played in court.

“I literally let the savage inside of me out,” he said in the call played for jurors during closing arguments, according to a courtroom report from local NBC affiliate WRC.

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The call, along with photos a nearby business owner took of Landon as he dumped what turned out to be part of Sylla’s dismembered body in a retention pond, cellphone data and DNA evidence, was enough for jurors to issue a verdict after about an hour of deliberations.

Sylla was last seen around 8 p.m. on July 29, 2023, at a park in Greenbelt, a Washington, D.C., suburb. Shortly before 6:30 p.m. on Aug. 1, 2023, officers from the Prince George’s County Police Department responded to the 7300 block of Old Alexander Ferry Road in Clinton after human remains were located outside.

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Landon was picked up that same day on an unrelated assault charge. He was arrested for Sylla’s murder about a month later, after further investigation and the positive identification of the teacher’s body.

The assault was random, as Landon and Sylla did not know each other. Investigators never officially determined Sylla’s cause of death, although they believe he strangled her before chopping up her body parts and dumping them around the area, according to The Washington Post. Cops never recovered all of her remains.

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