Chattanooga Times Free Press

Sniper seeks reduced sentence

Malvo terrorized D.C. region in 2002

- BY DENISE LAVOIE

RICHMOND, Va. — A sniper who randomly killed 10 people and terrorized the Washington, D.C., region more than 15 years ago is entitled to a new hearing to ask for a lighter sentence, his lawyer argued Tuesday to a federal appeals court.

Lee Boyd Malvo was 17 when he and his mentor, John Allen Muhammad, then 41, shot people in Virginia, Maryland and Washington as they pumped gas, loaded packages into their cars and went about their everyday business during a three-week period in 2002.

Muhammad was sentenced to death and was executed in Virginia in 2009.

A jury convicted Malvo of capital murder for killing FBI analyst Linda Franklin, who was shot in the head outside a Home Depot store, but spared him the death penalty. Malvo later struck plea deals in other cases in Virginia and Maryland. He ultimately received four life sentences in Virginia and six in Maryland.

Malvo’s lawyer, Craig Cooley, on Tuesday urged the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to uphold a ruling by a federal judge who last year ordered new sentencing hearings in Virginia under a U.S. Supreme Court ruling that found mandatory life-without-parole sentences for juveniles unconstitu­tional. A 2016 Supreme Court ruling made the decision retroactiv­e, extending it to people such as Malvo who already were sentenced before the court found such punishment­s unconstitu­tional.

Cooley said the judge who presided at Malvo’s trial gave the jury only two choices in recommendi­ng a sentence for Malvo — life in prison without the possibilit­y of parole or the death penalty — with no option for a lesser sentence.

Jurors, Cooley said, “opted to go as low as they could under the structure they were given on that date.” He said the jury’s unanimous decision to give him life instead of the death penalty indicates “they may have gone lower if they knew they could have.”

But Deputy Solicitor General Matthew McGuire said the trial judge had discretion to reduce the jury’s recommenda­tion, but did not do so. He said the Supreme Court ruling does not apply to states that don’t have mandatory life-without-parole sentences.

The three-judge panel questioned Cooley extensivel­y about Malvo’s plea deal with prosecutor­s in which he agreed to plead guilty and receive a sentence of life in exchange for prosecutor­s dropping some charges and removing the death penalty as a possible sentence.

“How do you get around the plea agreement — the finality of plea agreements?” Judge Paul Niemeyer asked Cooley.

Cooley said Malvo agreed to “what is now an illegal sentence, an unconstitu­tional sentence.”

 ??  ?? Lee Boyd Malvo
Lee Boyd Malvo

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