CHESAPEAKE, Va. - Lee Boyd Malvo, the teenage sniper believed to have killed 10 people in attacks that terrorized two states and the District of Columbia in October 2002, was formally sentenced ...
CHESAPEAKE, Va., Dec. 23 -- -- A jury Tuesday spared Lee Boyd Malvo a death sentence, deciding instead to send him to prison for the rest of his life for the murder of Linda Franklin at a Home Depot ...
Virginia prosecutors and lawyers for Mr. Malvo asked the Supreme Court to drop his appeal in light of a new state law giving juvenile offenders the right to seek parole. By Adam Liptak The justices ...
Washington, D.C., area snipers John Allen Muhammad and Lee Boyd Malvo will not face murder charges for the unsolved slaying of a Tacoma woman in 2002, Pierce County prosecutors decided yesterday. In ...
Malvo, 18, exhaled heavily and hung his head as the clerk read the jury's finding that he met both qualifications for the death penalty. But when the clerk reached the words, "fix his punishment at - ...
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 ...
Currently in prison awaiting resentencing for multiple charges stemming from a multi-state shooting spree in 2002 that left ten people dead. In the Fairfax County, Virginia, trial, Malvo used an ...
CHESAPEAKE, Va. -- A jury began deciding Monday whether Lee Boyd Malvo should live or die for his part in the Washington sniper attacks after his lawyer argued that the young man had fallen under the ...
Jurors in the trial of convicted Washington sniper Lee Boyd Malvo begin deciding whether to sentence the teenager to death or life in prison without parole for his part in a 2002 killing spree. In ...