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Jolie Rouge
03-09-2004, 01:37 PM
Judge follows jury's recommendation
Tuesday, March 9, 2004 Posted: 1:20 PM EST

www.cnn.com/2004/LAW/03/09/sniper/index.html

MANASSAS, Virginia (CNN) -- A Virginia judge Tuesday sentenced John Allen Muhammad to death for killing Dean Harold Meyers -- one of 10 people shot to death during the October 2002 sniper shootings.

Prince William County Circuit Judge LeRoy Millette Jr. made the decision after reviewing a jury's recommendation.

Millette said the jury correctly found that Muhammad, 43, would be a "continuing, serious threat to society" if allowed to live.

Millette said he looked at other cases in Virginia for comparison, and "there simply are no other crimes" of the same magnitude.

Millette set an October 14 execution date, but that will likely be delayed by an appeal.

Before Millette pronounced the sentence, Muhammad insisted, "I had nothing to do with this."

"You do what you have to do and let me do what I have to do to defend myself," he told the judge.

Most of the sniper victims were gunned down in the Maryland and Virginia areas around the nation's capital.

Meyers, 53, was shot and killed October 9, 2002, while he was pumping gas at a Sunoco station in Manassas. It was one of 13 shootings that terrorized the region during a three-week span.

Muhammad's accomplice, Lee Boyd Malvo, 19, was convicted in a separate trial of another sniper shooting. A jury sentenced him to life without parole. His formal sentencing is set for Wednesday.

Muhammad's attorneys had pleaded that his life be spared, arguing in court papers filed Friday that "if someone is able to change from a loving father to a killer, then time can also change him back yet again."

Throughout his trial and sentencing, Muhammad, 43, maintained his innocence, and his attorneys have sought to overturn the verdict and sentence on numerous legal grounds. They also have laid the groundwork for future appeals.

Because the sniper killings took place in several jurisdictions, Muhammad and Malvo could be tried elsewhere, and one prosecutor said they should be.

"There's always the possibility of appeal and reversal on appeal," said Douglas Gansler, state's attorney for Montgomery County, Maryland. "We should try these men in other states applying other laws to other facts."

Future prosecutions of Malvo -- who was a minor at the time of the killings -- may be delayed until after the U.S. Supreme Court decides next year whether juvenile death sentences are constitutional.

A six-page document filed last week on Muhammad's behalf put aside questions of guilt or about legal procedure, asking Millette to reduce the verdict.

The filing said the court should consider Muhammad "was born an innocent infant, then became a child and a man who was buffeted by crushing poverty, neglect and abuse, by war, and ultimately by the loss of his children and his marriage."

Prosecutors allege that Muhammad was motivated by the loss of his children in a bitter divorce with his wife, Mildred.

The court filing, by attorneys Peter Greenspun and Jonathan Shapiro, goes on to say that Muhammad was "a proud member of the ROTC" and served in the Louisiana and Oregon national guards and the U.S. Army. They said he had no previous criminal record

The filing also said that the state would be wrong to sanction another killing and that it would serve only to make Muhammad's children fatherless.

Jolie Rouge
03-09-2004, 01:45 PM
James Martin

James Martin, the father of an 11-year-old boy and leader of his son's Boy Scout troop, was in the parking lot of a grocery store when he was shot to death on October 2, 2002.

Martin, 55, was a program analyst for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Office of Marine and Aviation Operations. He was also a Civil War buff and an amateur genealogist.


James Buchanan

James Buchanan usually stopped by Fitzgerald Auto Mall on Fridays to tend to the landscaping. He came early that week and was mowing when he was shot to death on Thursday, October 3, 2002.

Buchanan, 39, worked as an independent landscaper, but he was also an amateur poet and volunteer who worked with Boys and Girls clubs, dealership owner Dottie Fitzgerald said.


Premkumar Walekar

Premkumar Walekar, a part-time cab driver, started his day earlier than usual with the forecast of sunshine and highs in the 80s, figuring he'd do his work and then enjoy the rest of the day.

Instead, the 54-year-old from Olney, Maryland, was killed while pumping gas into his taxi at a Mobil station in Aspen Hill, Maryland, on October 3, 2002.


Sarah Ramos

Sarah Ramos, of Silver Spring, Maryland, got off a bus at the Leisure World Shopping Center and sat down on a bench to read when she was shot in the head on October 3, 2002.

A native of El Salvador, Ramos, 34, was a member of several church groups. She babysat for children and worked as a housekeeper. She was married and had a 7-year-old son.


Lori Ann Lewis-Rivera

Lewis-Rivera, 25, was killed early October 3, 2002 at a Shell gas station in Kensington, Maryland. She worked in Washington and had moved into a garden apartment about a year ago with her daughter and husband, but dreamed of moving to a house, neighbor Janine Rocah said.

Lewis-Rivera doted on her preschool-age daughter, said Rocah, who lived in the same apartment complex in a working-class section of Silver Spring, Maryland.


Pascal Charlot

Pascal Charlot, 72, was shot in the chest Thursday, October 3, 2002, as he was walking along Georgia Avenue in Washington, D.C., about 9:15 p.m. He died less than an hour later in a hospital.


Dean Harold Meyers

On October 9, 2002, Dean Harold Meyers, 53, was fatally shot as he pumped gas at a station in Manassas, Virginia. Meyers was a civil engineer from Gaithersburg, Maryland, and a Vietnam War veteran.


Kenneth Bridges

Kenneth Bridges, 53, a businessman from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, was killed as he filled his gas tank at an Exxon station off I-95 near Fredericksburg, Virginia, the morning of October 11, 2002. The co-founder of a marketing distribution company, Bridges was in the area on a business trip.

Friend Gary Shepherd said, "Ken was a loving husband, father of six children and an outstanding citizen of the Philadelphia community."


Linda Franklin

Linda Franklin, 47, had just finished shopping at a Home Depot in Falls Church, Virginia, when she was killed October 14, 2002.

Police said she was with her husband when she was shot once as she loaded items in her car in a parking garage around 9:15 p.m.

Sources said Franklin worked for the FBI's National Infrastructure Protection Center and said there was no indication she was targeted because of her occupation.


Conrad Johnson

Conrad Johnson, 35, was a bus driver shot October 22, 2002, in Silver Spring, Maryland.

The father of two was a 10-year county employee, who "loved basketball, loved his kids," Montgomery County executive Doug Duncan said.

Johnson, from nearby Oxon Hill, Maryland, was shot in the stomach, apparently as he was getting off the bus in a staging area for the commuter line.



The filing also said that the state would be wrong to sanction another killing and that it would serve only to make Muhammad's children fatherless.

:mad: The death penalty is made for these types of crimes.

Technologist
03-09-2004, 01:45 PM
:D :D :D :D

GOOD!

:D :D :D :D

freeby4me
03-09-2004, 01:49 PM
Agreed......The faster the better. Im glad Justice was served.:(

lassss
03-09-2004, 01:51 PM
gooood he deserves to die

Kitcat
03-09-2004, 01:54 PM
Originally posted by freeby4me
The faster the better. .:(


I Totally agree...

DAVESBABYDOLL
03-09-2004, 02:09 PM
whew creepy....the second victim's name is my biological dad's name (he's deceased)



I hope they don't keep him around for years....I say take'em in the court house back yard and use'em for target practice.

Jaxx
03-09-2004, 04:13 PM
Serves him right :mad:

Jolie Rouge
03-10-2004, 12:49 PM
Teenage Sniper Malvo Gets Life Sentence
By MATTHEW BARAKAT

http://cnn.netscape.cnn.com/ns/news/story.jsp?floc=FF-APO-1110&idq=/ff/story/0001%2F20040310%2F1324384659.htm&sc=1110&photoid=20040310VASH104

CHESAPEAKE, Va. (AP) - Teenage sniper Lee Boyd Malvo was sentenced to life in prison without parole Wednesday for an October 2002 killing spree in the Washington, D.C., area that left 10 people dead.

Malvo, 19, was sentenced a day after sniper mastermind John Allen Muhammad was given the death penalty. Malvo did not speak at the brief hearing.

Malvo was convicted in December of the slaying of FBI analyst Linda Franklin, 47, outside a Falls Church, Va., Home Depot store. His defense team had argued that Malvo had been molded into a killer by the charismatic Muhammad.

Muhammad used his sentencing hearing on Tuesday to again deny any role in the killings, echoing a claim of innocence he made at the start of his trial when he briefly served as his own attorney.


``Just like I said at the beginning, I had nothing to do with this, and I'll say again, I had nothing to do with this,'' Muhammad said.


But Circuit Judge LeRoy F. Millette Jr. said the evidence of Muhammad's guilt was ``overwhelming'' and sentenced him to death.


``These offenses are so vile that they were almost beyond comprehension,'' Millette said.


Millette had the option of reducing the jury's recommendation of death to life in prison without parole. Virginia law allows a judge to reduce a jury's recommended sentence but not increase it.


Circuit Judge Jane Marum Roush had no leeway to change the jury's recommendation of life in prison for Malvo because that is the minimum punishment allowed for a capital murder conviction.


Doug Keefer, a juror who plans to write a book about the Malvo trial, said the jury made the right choice.


``For me the important part was he was convicted of the capital murder charges. It's my opinion there was some influence from John Muhammad.''


Defense lawyer Craig Cooley also said Muhammad was an influence. ``We do not believe anyone could have observed the evidence ... and believed Lee Malvo would be here except for the influence of John Muhammad,'' Cooley said.


It's unclear what will happen next with Malvo. Prosecutors in other states, including Alabama and Louisiana, are seeking his extradition to face potential death-penalty charges there for killings that occurred in the weeks before the D.C. sniper spree.


Prosecutors in Prince William County, who obtained the death penalty against Muhammad, initially said they wanted to seek the death penalty against Malvo as well. But they have recently said they may want to wait and see the outcome of a pending U.S. Supreme Court case on the execution of juveniles. Malvo was 17 at the time of the sniper spree.


Muhammad appeared in court Tuesday with a slightly graying, unkempt beard, in sharp contrast to his clean-shaven, well-dressed appearance at trial.


About 50 family members of sniper victims were in the courtroom. One silently shook his fist as Millette announced the sentence.


``Justice has been served today,'' said Sonia Wills, mother of sniper victim Conrad Johnson, who would have been 37 this Sunday. ``I can go to my son's grave and wish him a happy birthday.''


The sister of Hong Im Ballenger, allegedly killed by Muhammad and Malvo in Baton Rouge, La., in the weeks before the D.C. attacks, said Muhammad deserved to die.


``He killed so many innocent people,'' said a tearful Kwang Im Szuszka. ``My nephew is 12 years old and he needs his mommy. ... It breaks my heart.''


Muhammad, 43, was convicted of capital murder on Nov. 17 for the Oct. 9, 2002, murder of Dean Harold Meyers at a gas station near Manassas.


The capital-area killings began on Oct. 2, 2002, when the pair shot a 55-year-old man to death outside a Wheaton, Md., supermarket. The following day, five people were killed in the Washington area - four within a span of about two hours.


Muhammad and Malvo were captured Oct. 24 at a highway rest stop near Myersville, Md., in a car that had been altered to allow someone to fire a high-powered rifle from inside the trunk.



03/10/04 13:23