News and Document archive source
copyrighted material disclaimer at bottom of page

NewsMinedeceptionsbeltway-sniperjohn-allen — Viewing Item


No sniper evidence

Original Source Link: (May no longer be active)
   http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20021223/ap_on_re_us/sniper_shootings_2

http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20021223/ap_on_re_us/sniper_shootings_2

Report: Evidence Points to Teen as Sniper
Sun Dec 22, 7:23 PM ET Add U.S. National - AP to My Yahoo!

CENTREVILLE, Va. - Evidence in the Washington-area sniper shootings case points to teenager John Lee Malvo as the triggerman in most if not all of the shootings, according to a published report Sunday.

That could complicate prosecutors' efforts to get a death sentence for the older suspect, John Muhammad.

"There is not much pointing to Muhammad, and that is going to make it really hard to show that he was the triggerman," one senior law enforcement official involved in the case told The New York Times. "There are other ways to attempt to obtain a death sentence, but this lack of evidence has been one of the most perplexing things about the case."

Muhammad, 41, and Malvo, 17, are charged with capital murder and could face the death penalty if convicted. Prosecutors say they are responsible for 13 shootings over a three-week period in October that left 10 dead and three wounded in Maryland, Virginia and Washington. They also are suspected in attacks in Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana and Washington state.

Prosecutors, defense lawyers and police involved in the case in Virginia did not immediately return phone calls Sunday seeking comment.

Fairfax County police are under a gag order prohibiting them from publicly disclosing nearly all aspects of their investigation. It was imposed last week after The Washington Post cited anonymous sources saying Malvo had confessed to being the triggerman in some of the shootings.

"It is remarkable, that even after one court has entered a permanent injunction against such leaks of information, that law enforcement personnel cannot retrain themselves to not leak information," Muhammad's lawyer, Peter Greenspun, told The Associated Press on Sunday.

"This story only further demonstrates how easy it is to come to conclusions on speculation and innuendo versus facts," Greenspun said.

The Times reported Sunday that the evidence against Malvo includes:

_His own admissions to the slayings of Linda Franklin in Falls Church on Oct. 14 and Dean Harold Meyers in Manassas on Oct. 9, and to one in Maryland.

_Hair linked by DNA to Malvo in the trunk of the car police believe was used as a sniper's nest.


_Malvo's fingerprints found on paper near where investigators believe the shot was fired that wounded a middle school student in Bowie, Md., on Oct. 7.


_Saliva found on a grape stem on a hill where investigators believe the shot was fired that killed bus driver Conrad Johnson in Aspen Hill on Oct. 22.


The Justice Department (news - web sites) arranged to have the suspects tried first in Virginia, rather than in Maryland or Washington, largely because death sentences could be obtained more easily against both in Virginia.


A new anti-terrorism law passed in Virginia after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks makes the death penalty possible for criminal masterminds who plan an attack but don't actually carry it out. In addition, Malvo and Muhammad are charged under a more traditional death penalty statute. Unlike Maryland and the District of Columbia, Virginia allows for the death penalty in murders committed by some as young as 17.


While the terrorism law makes it easier to obtain the death penalty against a person who is not the triggerman, it is also a new, untested law that will likely be challenged on constitutional grounds.


The other statute allows for the death penalty when a person commits more than one murder in a three-year period. That statute is unlikely to face a constitutional challenge, but generally only the triggerman can receive the death penalty under that law.


Prince William Commonwealth's Attorney Paul Ebert has said a death penalty could be obtained if the evidence overwhelmingly shows that the person who didn't pull the trigger was so thoroughly involved in the planning and execution of the crime that his involvement was equivalent to carrying it out.







conspiracy
pinning-malvo
24 muhammad reuters [jpg]
Alabama crime
Atf probe gun sale
Camp ground zero
Charged lousiana { November 1 2002 }
Charges dismissed in virginia sniper killing { October 2 2004 }
Crazy desert storm { November 8 2002 }
Escape attempt
Ex gi and teen
Grounds for reversing terrorism rule
Gunfire near tacoma
Insisted not involved { October 22 2003 }
John allen [jpg]
Jury recommends death for muhammad { November 24 2003 }
Liked to mingle
Link in alabama
Mother tried 4son { October 25 2002 }
Muhammad defends self { October 21 2003 }
Muhammad pleads not guilt { October 15 2003 }
No sniper evidence
Rifle from tacoma
Rifle matches
Same national guard unit moose { October 28 2002 }
Sentenced to death despite no evidence { March 10 2004 }
Sniper farrakhan member
Sniper framed for 911 conspiracy knowledge he says { April 29 2006 }
Sniper gets terrorist trial { November 9 2002 }
Sniper md gives va { November 8 2002 }
Tacoma shop 340 guns
Terrorism vaguely defined
Tied more deaths
Train fort lewis
Two arrested
Two in custody { October 24 2002 }
Two men arrested

Files Listed: 35



Correction/submissions

CIA FOIA Archive

National Security
Archives
Support one-state solution for Israel and Palestine Tea Party bumper stickers JFK for Dummies, The Assassination made simple