WEATHER53
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- Apr 13, 2017
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Weeper hoochies make noise some about early release for MalvoI have been in Maryland and do you know what I think about most when that state is mentioned?
The terror done by two blacks with the young guy killing people from a hole cut in the car trunk. I was then based at Falls Church VA and it was a site of a woman being murdered by them. Even going to Richmond, that highway did not escape their murder due to them driving down into VA to kill. All my life people I do not understand at all, murder. But having it be that close to me for a good long time really taught me what people experience when parties decide to stop being a decent citizen and engage in murder.
Washington, D.C. sniper John Muhammad convicted | November 17, 2003 | HISTORY
On November 17, 2003, ex-soldier John Muhammad is found guilty of one of a series of sniper shootings that terrorized the metropolitan Washington, D.C. area and dominated national headlines in October 2002. Police charged that Muhammad and his 17-year-old accomplice, Lee Boyd Malvo, killed 10...www.history.com
The older man was executed. The younger killer is in prison.
The first to die was killed when I was still in CA. I had been to Falls Church in earlier years. When i got there, it was constantly on the news. It was so blatant if you gassed up and was not hiding as much as you could, you probably had been drunk someplace.
On November 17, 2003, ex-soldier John Muhammad is found guilty of one of a series of sniper shootings that terrorized the metropolitan Washington, D.C. area and dominated national headlines in October 2002. Police charged that Muhammad and his 17-year-old accomplice, Lee Boyd Malvo, killed 10 people and wounded three others during a three-week killing spree. After just over six hours of deliberation, a jury convicted Muhammad of the October 9, 2002, shooting of Dean Meyers while he pumped gas at a Sunoco station in Manassas, Virginia.
The first of the “Beltway sniper” attacks occurred on October 2, 2002, when five people died after being shot at long range over a 15-hour span in suburban Montgomery County, Maryland. Sniper-style shootings continued over the next three weeks—at gas stations and in parking lots within Washington, D.C.’s Beltway area and along Interstate 95 in Virginia. Local residents, frightened by the seemingly random nature of the shootings, which crossed racial, gender, and socioeconomic lines, crouched behind their cars while pumping gas and avoided outdoor activities. Schools held recess indoors and sports teams cancelled outdoor practices. The killers left a series of cryptic clues at crime scenes including tarot cards and notes and even called the police hotline, apparently trying to engage investigators in a dialogue.
John Muhammad was sentenced to death on March 9, 2004. He was executed on November 10, 2009. After a separate trial, Lee Boyd Malvo, who was a minor at the time of the shootings, was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.
Bunch of us were going to the execution to throw a good riddance party but they kept the date quiet.