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For three weeks in 2002, John Muhammad, 42, and Lee Boyd Malvo, 17, terrorized the streets of Washington D.C., killing random white civilians with a rifle fired from the trunk of Muhammad’s car.
A grand jury indicted 17-year-old Lee Boyd (a.k.a. John Lee) Malvo on two counts of capital murder in last fall's sniper shootings, setting the stage for a death penalty trial. The indictment ...
Lee Boyd Malvo became an adult in the eyes of the court yesterday when authorities unsealed an indictment charging him with capital murder, making him eligible for the death penalty. Malvo's ...
CHESAPEAKE, Va. — Last summer, a clinical psychologist entered the Fairfax County jail to conduct tests on Lee Boyd Malvo, expecting to find the sniper suspect in an anxious and somber mood.
Lee Boyd Malvo, who as a teen was part of a two-person sniping crew that killed 10 people and wounded three around Washington, D.C., in 2002, was married this month while serving life in prison ...
Virginia corrections officials have denied parole to convicted Washington, D.C. sniper Lee Boyd Malvo, ruling that he is still a risk to the community two decades after he and his partner shot and ...
ANNAPOLIS, Md. — Maryland's highest court has ruled that Washington, D.C.-area sniper Lee Boyd Malvo must be resentenced, because of U.S. Supreme Court decisions relating to constitutional ...
A federal judge in Virginia overturned the two life sentences of Washington-area sniper Lee Boyd Malvo on Friday, more than a decade after he was originally sentenced as a teenager. US District ...
Relatives, friends and former teachers of sniper suspect Lee Boyd Malvo described him Tuesday as an obedient, inquisitive and cheerful boy, but said he sometimes appeared emotionally vulnerable.
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