By A Mystery Man Writer
The Supreme Court on Monday agreed to hear a case challenging whether one of the notorious Beltway snipers should get a new sentence. Lee Boyd Malvo was 17 when he murdered 10 people and wounded others alongside 41-year-old John Allen Muhammad in a string of random sniper attacks in 2002 that terrorized the Maryland, Virginia…
The Supreme Court on Monday agreed to hear a case challenging whether one of the notorious Beltway snipers should get a new sentence. Lee Boyd Malvo was 17 when he murdered 10 people and wounded others alongside 41-year-old John Allen Muhammad in a string of random sniper attacks in 2002 that terrorized the Maryland, Virginia…
Supreme Court to consider life-without-parole sentence for teen DC sniper
John Allen Muhammad, D.C. sniper, loses Supreme Court appeal
DC Sniper Lee Boyd Malvo's 4 Life Sentences To Be Revisited
DC sniper Lee Boyd Malvo pulls Supreme Court appeal after new Virginia parole law - ABC News
DC sniper Lee Boyd Malvo to ask Supreme Court for new sentence
John Allen Muhammad - Wikipedia
Supreme Court to Consider When Juveniles May Get Life Without Parole - The New York Times
The Supreme Court will decide if criminals can get guns without background checks - Vox
Unearthed: The secret behind America's most terrifying killing spree
Chief's Counsel: U.S. Supreme Court Sneak Peek: Top 10 Law Enforcement Cases to Be Decided in the Court's October 2019–2020 Term - Daigle Law Group