Who is Lee Boyd Malvo Wiki, Bio, Age, Arrested, Facebook, Instagram, Twitter & more Facts
Lee Boyd Malvo Wiki
The Supreme Court appeared split down ideological lines Wednesday about whether Lee Boyd Malvo deserves a new hearing to fight for his right to someday walk out of prison.
Loved ones of some of Beltway sniper Lee Boyd Malvo’s many victims think he deserves reconsideration of his life w/o parole sentencing. Supreme Court takes up his case on Wednesday. via @TomJackmanWP https://t.co/hJDZGw6ARk
— Robert Barnes (@scotusreporter) October 14, 2019
An attorney for the “D.C. sniper” relied on cases the high court decided involving juvenile defendants in the years since Lee Boyd Malvo’s original trial in 2003, saying her client’s life-without-parole sentence now appears too harsh and he should get a second chance at receiving a lesser punishment.
Lee Boyd Malvo was 17 at the time of the shooting spree when he and an adult accomplice, John Allen Muhammad, terrorized the Washington area for a month and a half in 2002.
Life before Muhammad
Lee Boyd Malvo was born on Feb. 18, 1985, to Leslie Lee Boyd Malvo, a mason, and Una James, a seamstress. The couple, who never married, lived in Kingston, Jama. Una James left Leslie Lee Boyd Malvo in 1990, when Lee Lee Boyd Malvo was 5 years old. James and Lee Boyd Malvo moved to the hill-town of Endeavor, Jamaica, to be with her sister Marie Lawrence for almost a year.
It was 17 years ago, Tuesday then-17-year-old Lee Boyd Malvo looked across Route 50 in Falls Church and gave the “go” signal —John Allen Muhammad pulled the trigger. https://t.co/Tgu9z6mvUg
— Neal Augenstein (@AugensteinWTOP) October 15, 2019
They moved back to Kingston, and later to St. Martin. When Lee Boyd Malvo was 9 years old he was sent to live with his aunt Marie, where he stayed for almost a year. In sixth grade, Lee Boyd Malvo did so well on an entrance exam that he was sent to York Castle High School Jamaican pastor Lorenzo King baptized Lee Boyd Malvo into the Seventh-day Adventist Church at 14 years of age in 1999 Lee Boyd Malvo later moved to Antigua in 1999 to be with his mother. He registered at Antigua and Barbuda Seventh-day Adventist School, where he got good grades and also won a school award in the 100 meter run.
Lee Boyd Malvo was an immigrant who at no point became a legal resident of the United States.
Joining John Allen Muhammad
Lee Boyd Malvo and his mother, Una Sceon James, first met John Allen Muhammad in Antigua and Barbuda around 1999, where James and Muhammad developed a strong friendship. Later, James left Antigua for Fort Myers, Florida, using false documents. She left her son with Muhammad, reportedly planning to have him follow her later. Lee Boyd Malvo was converted to Islam by Muhammad in March 2001, Muhammad also isolated Lee Boyd Malvo from his mother.Lee Boyd Malvo arrived illegally in Miami in 2001, and in December of that year, he and his mother were apprehended by the Border Patrol in Bellingham, Washington. In January 2002, Lee Boyd Malvo was released on a $1,500 bond.
Lee Boyd Malvo is currently serving life in prison without parole for his part in the 2002 “Beltway Sniper” attacks. The U.S. Supreme Court is hearing arguments that his punishment is unconstitutional because nobody discussed his youth at sentencing. https://t.co/tiaISEw6NS pic.twitter.com/zCwGouxyRF
— Law360’s Access to Justice (@Justice_Law360) October 16, 2019
Lee Boyd Malvo traveled to Bellingham, Washington, where he lived in a homeless shelter with Muhammad. Lee Boyd Malvo enrolled in Bellingham High School with Muhammad falsely listed as his father, but he did not make any friends, according to his classmates. While in the Tacoma, Washington area, according to his statements to investigators, Lee Boyd Malvo shoplifted a Bushmaster XM-15 from Bull’s Eye Shooter Supply and practiced his marksmanship on the Bull’s Eye firing range adjacent to the gun shop. Under federal laws, neither Muhammad nor Lee Boyd Malvo was legally allowed to purchase or possess guns, with both classified as prohibited persons under the Gun Control Act of 1968.
Lee Boyd Malvo Criminal prosecutions
Lee Boyd Malvo was initially arrested under federal charges, but they were dropped. He was transferred to Virginia custody and sent to jail in Fairfax County. He was charged by the Commonwealth of Virginia for two capital crimes: The murder of FBI analyst Linda Franklin “in the commission of an act of terrorism” and the murder of more than one person in a three-year period. He was also charged with the unlawful use of a firearm in the murder of Franklin. Initially, a Fairfax attorney, Michael Arif, was appointed to represent him, along with Thomas B. Walsh and Mark J. Petrovich. Later, prominent Richmond attorney Craig Cooley was appointed to the team and assumed a leadership role. While in jail, Lee Boyd Malvo made a recorded confession to Detective Samuel Walker in which he stated that he “intended to kill them all”.
During the trial, Cooley said that violent video games had contributed significantly to Lee Boyd Malvo’s state of mind and his willingness to commit murder. Cooley said, “He’s trained and desensitized with video games, computer games, to train him to shoot human forms over and over.”Sociologists Lawrence Kutner and Cheryl K. Olson, however, argue in their book Grand Theft Childhood that other factors were much more significant. “In court, Lee Lee Boyd Malvo admitted that he trained by shooting a real gun at paper plates that represented human heads. Also, Lee Boyd Malvo had a long history of antisocial and criminal behavior, including torturing small animals, one of the best predictors of future violent criminal behavior.”
On December 18, 2003, after nearly 14 hours of deliberation, a jury convicted Lee Boyd Malvo of both charges. On December 23, the jury recommended a sentence of life in prison without the possibility of parole for the murder of Franklin. On March 10, 2004, Lee Boyd Malvo was sentenced to life in prison without parole.
On October 26, 2004, under a plea bargain to avoid a possible death penalty, Lee Boyd Malvo entered an Alford plea to the charges of murdering Kenneth Bridges and attempting to murder Caroline Seawell while Lee Boyd Malvo was in Spotsylvania County, Virginia. He also pleaded guilty to two firearms charges and agreed not to appeal his conviction for the murder of Franklin. He was sentenced to life in prison without parole for murder, plus eight years imprisonment for the weapons charges.
One Virginia prosecutor in Prince William County had stated he would wait to decide whether to try Lee Boyd Malvo on additional capital charges in his jurisdiction until the U.S. Supreme Court ruled on whether juveniles may be subject to execution. In light of the March 1, 2005 Supreme Court decision in Roper v. Simmons that the Eighth Amendment prohibits execution for crimes committed when under age 18, the prosecutors in Prince William County decided not to pursue the charges against Lee Boyd Malvo. Prosecutors in Maryland, Louisiana, and Alabama were still interested in putting both Lee Boyd Malvo and Muhammad on trial.
As Lee Boyd Malvo was 17 when he committed the crimes, he cannot face the death penalty, but still may be extradited to Alabama, Louisiana, and other states for prosecution. At the outset of the Beltway sniper prosecutions, the primary reason for extraditing the two suspects from Maryland, where they were arrested, to Virginia was the differences in how the two states deal with the death penalty. While the death penalty was allowed in Maryland, it only applied to persons who were adults at the time of their crimes, whereas Virginia had also allowed the death penalty for offenders who had been juveniles when their crimes were committed. A death sentence was more likely to result in execution in Virginia than in Maryland, which abolished its death penalty in 2013. In May 2005, Virginia and Maryland reached an agreement to allow Maryland to begin prosecuting some of the pending charges there, and Lee Boyd Malvo was extradited to Montgomery County, Maryland, under heavy security.
On June 16, 2006, Lee Boyd Malvo told authorities that he and Muhammad were guilty of four additional shootings. The four most recently linked victims were also shot in 2002: A man killed in Los Angeles, California, during a robbery in February or March; a 76 year-old man who survived a shooting on May 18 at a golf course in Clearwater, Florida; a man shot to death while doing yard work in Denton, Texas, May 27; and 54 year-old John Gaeta, who survived being shot on August 1 during a robbery outside a shopping mall near Baton Rouge, Louisiana.
On October 10, 2006, Lee Boyd Malvo pleaded guilty to the six murders he was charged within Maryland. On October 26, he told police that he and Muhammad had killed Jerry Taylor, 60, as Taylor practiced chip shots at a Tucson, Arizona, golf course in March 2002. Tucson detectives interviewed Lee Boyd Malvo about Taylor, who died from a single gunshot fired at long range, but did not disclose their findings. On November 8, Lee Boyd Malvo was sentenced to six consecutive life sentences without the possibility of parole.
Lee Boyd Malvo Civil lawsuit
In 2003, Lee Boyd Malvo and Muhammad were named in a major civil lawsuit by the Legal Action Project of the Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence on behalf of two of their victims who were seriously wounded and the families of some of those murdered. Co-defendants Bull’s Eye Shooter Supply and Bushmaster Firearms contributed to a landmark $2.5 million out-of-court settlement in late 2004.
Lee Boyd Malvo 2006 account
In Muhammad’s May 2006 trial in Montgomery County, Maryland, Lee Boyd Malvo took the stand and confessed to a more detailed version of the pair’s plans. Lee Boyd Malvo, after extensive counseling, admitted that he had been lying in the statement he made after his arrest when he admitted to being the triggerman for every shooting. Lee Boyd Malvo claimed that he had said this to protect Muhammad from the death penalty because it was more difficult to achieve the death penalty for a minor. Lee Boyd Malvo stated, “I’m not proud of myself. I’m just trying to make amends”, expressing his regret in the shootings. In his two days of testimony, Lee Boyd Malvo outlined detailed aspects of all the shootings.
Part of his testimony concerned Muhammad’s complete plan, which consisted of three phases in the Washington, D.C. and Baltimore metro areas. Phase One consisted of meticulously planning, mapping and practicing their locations around the D.C. area so that after each shooting they could quickly leave the area on a predetermined path and move to the next location. Muhammad’s goal in Phase One was to kill six white people a day for 30 days. Lee Boyd Malvo went on to describe how Phase One did not go as planned due to heavy traffic and the lack of a clear shot and/or getaway at different locations.
Phase Two was meant to take place in Baltimore. Lee Boyd Malvo described how this phase was close to being implemented but was never carried out. Phase Two was intended to begin by killing a pregnant woman by shooting her in the abdomen. The next step would have been to shoot and kill a Baltimore police officer. At the officer’s funeral, they would plant several improvised explosive devices. These explosives were intended to kill a large number of police since many police would attend another officer’s funeral. More bombs were then to be detonated as ambulances arrived at the scene.
The last phase was to take place immediately after Phase Two: to extort several million dollars from the U.S. government. This money would be used to finance a larger plan to travel north into Canada and recruit other effectively orphaned boys to use weapons and stealth and send them out to commit shootings across the country.
Lee Boyd Malvo Post-sentencing
As of 2014, Lee Boyd Malvo is incarcerated at the Red Onion State Prison as Virginia Department of Corrections inmate 1180834.
- On October 2, 2007, Lee Boyd Malvo called the daughter of one of the victims, Cheryll Witz, to apologize for his actions.
- Lee Boyd Malvo sent a letter, dated February 21, 2010, to apologize to John C. Gaeta for shooting him. Lee Boyd Malvo wrote: “I am truly sorry for the pain I caused you and your loved ones. I was relieved to hear that you suffered no paralyzing injuries and that you are alive.”
- A Wise County, Virginia Circuit Judge denied Lee Boyd Malvo’s request to change his name on July 29, 2011. Lee Boyd Malvo petitioned the court for the name change on the basis that it would be safer if his fellow inmates did not know his real name, due to his notoriety.
- In September 2012, Lee Boyd Malvo gave a lengthy interview to The Washington Post. In this interview, Lee Boyd Malvo, then 27, stated that “I was a monster. If you look up the definition, that’s what a monster is. I was a ghoul. I was a thief. I stole people’s lives. I did someone else’s bidding just because they said so. There is no rhyme or reason or sense.”In an interview with Matt Lauer on October 24, 2012, Lee Boyd Malvo said that Muhammad sexually abused him.
- On May 26, 2017, a federal district court judge in Virginia overturned Lee Boyd Malvo’s sentences of life without parole on the grounds that it was unconstitutional under Miller v. Alabama because Lee Boyd Malvo was 17 years old at the time of the killings. However, on August 16, 2017, Montgomery County, Maryland Circuit Court Judge Robert Greenberg decided that the Virginia federal court ruling did not apply to the Maryland cases since the sentences were not mandatory in the state of Maryland. Greenberg wrote, “The six consecutive life-without-parole sentences were imposed after a full consideration of the Defendant’s physical, mental, and emotional state”. He went on to state that the judge who imposed the original sentence “considered all relevant factors at play and the plain import of his words at the time was that Defendant is ‘irreparably corrupted.'”
- On June 21, 2018, the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit unanimously upheld a lower court’s decision that Lee Boyd Malvo’s sentences of life without parole were unconstitutional. Judge [Paul V. Niemeyer wrote in the decision that “Lee Boyd Malvo was 17 years old when he committed the murders, and he now has the retroactive benefit of new constitutional rules that treat juveniles differently for sentencing.” A spokesperson for Virginia Attorney General Mark Herring stated the office is considering asking for a full 4th Circuit rehearing or appealing to the Supreme Court of the United States to hear the case.
- On June 29, 2018, Virginia Attorney General Mark Herring said in a statement that his office was seeking to have the Supreme Court of the United States review the case. On March 18, 2019, the Supreme Court granted certiorari, and will likely hear the case during its fall term.