BALTIMORE (WJZ)– A Montgomery County judge will hear arguments of D.C. sniper, Lee Boyd Malvo Thursday, who claims the six life-without-parole terms he received in the County have been rendered illegal by U.S. Supreme Court decisions saying mandatory life-without-parole sentences are unconstitutional for juveniles except in rare cases, according to the Baltimore Sun.
Malvo, 32, pleaded guilty in the 2002 sniper attacks that terrorized the Washington area.
Malvo was 17 when he took part in the attacks that left 10 people dead and three wounded in Maryland, Virginia and Washington. His accomplice, John Allen Muhammad, was 41 at the time. Muhammad was executed in 2009 in Virginia.
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Mambo should have been executed, too.
ReplyDeleteMalvo. Damned spellcheck!.
ReplyDeleteNo, its how they pronounce his name
DeleteMalvo should be put down. He is of zero value to this world
ReplyDelete
ReplyDeleteIf it's decided he should not have life without parole, amend the sentences to Life but to run successively rather than concurrently. Were he granted parole on one, the next would commence. And so on.
Hasn't he GONE to Hell Yet after All this time went by ????
ReplyDeleteOh Now the Govt is going to baby him .............