Low energy electron induced dissociation of condensed nitromethane was investigated by measuring the electron stimulated desorption of anions and cations from multilayer films of CH3NO2 and CD3NO2, using a recently constructed, high sensitivity time of flight mass spectrometer. The desorbed yields were measured as a function of incident electron energy in the range between 1 to 20 eV and as function of coverage on Pt and Xe substrates. In anion desorption experiments, the following ions were observed: H- (D-), O-, OH- (OD-), CN-, NCO-, NO2-, CHNO2- (CDNO2-), CH2NO2- (CD2NO2-). Resonant structure seen in all anion yield functions, is attributed to dissociative electron attachment (DEA), though certain anion signals [e. g., OH- (OD-) and CH2NO2- (CD2NO2-)] are likely the result of reactive scattering by O- ions. The dominant desorbed cation signals are CD3+ and NO+, and the appearance potentials of these species were measured to be 12.2 and 11.5 eV, respectively. The present measurements provide information on how the electron-induced dissociation processes of this proto-typical explosive molecule are modulated by the condensed environment and on how initial dissociation events occurring on a particular molecule, may induce further dissociation.