Court upholds D.C. sniper death penalty

pegwinn

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Apr 17, 2004
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Can anyone muster arguments on behalf of these two? I hope that the actual execution of the sentence takes place in less than twenty years.

Court upholds D.C. sniper death penalty
Justices dissent on penalty since Muhammad didn’t pull trigger

The Associated Press
Updated: 9:09 p.m. ET April 22, 2005


RICHMOND, Va. - The Virginia Supreme Court on Friday upheld sniper John Allen Muhammad’s murder convictions and death penalty for carrying out what it called a “cruel scheme of terror” that left 10 people dead around the Washington area.

The court brushed aside arguments that Muhammad could not be sentenced to death under state law because he was not the triggerman. And it rejected claims that the post-Sept. 11 terrorism law under which he was prosecuted is unconstitutionally vague.

“If society’s ultimate penalty should be reserved for the most heinous offenses, accompanied by proof of vileness or future dangerousness, then surely this case qualifies,” Justice Donald Lemons wrote.

Muhammad was convicted on two counts of capital murder for the shooting of Dean Harold Meyers in Virginia during the three-week killing spree in October 2002.

‘I’ve had my fingers crossed’
“I’ve had my fingers crossed all these months,” said Prince William County Commonwealth’s Attorney Paul Ebert, who prosecuted Muhammad. “Now I can uncross them.”

Peter D. Greenspun, a lawyer for Muhammad, said he and co-counsel Jonathan Shapiro were “extremely disappointed.”

“There is a significant dissent, so we are going to review the entirety of the decision and continue to do everything we can to protect John Muhammad’s interests and save his life,” Greenspun said.

The Supreme Court unanimously affirmed the conviction based on the terrorism law but split 4-3 in upholding the conviction under the triggerman rule.

The court’s majority found that even if Muhammad’s teenage accomplice, Lee Boyd Malvo, pulled the trigger, Muhammad was eligible for the death penalty as an “immediate perpetrator” of slaying.

‘Cruel scheme of terror’
“Muhammad, with his sniper team partner, Malvo, randomly selected innocent victims,” Lemons wrote. “With calculation, extensive planning, premeditation and ruthless disregard for life, Muhammad carried out his cruel scheme of terror.”

The dissenting justices said Muhammad’s actions — positioning the sniper team’s car and telling Malvo when to fire — “were of the same character as those of a lookout or wheelman in a robbery.”

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pegwinn said:
Can anyone muster arguments on behalf of these two? I hope that the actual execution of the sentence takes place in less than twenty years.

Court upholds D.C. sniper death penalty
Justices dissent on penalty since Muhammad didn’t pull trigger

The Associated Press
Updated: 9:09 p.m. ET April 22, 2005


RICHMOND, Va. - The Virginia Supreme Court on Friday upheld sniper John Allen Muhammad’s murder convictions and death penalty for carrying out what it called a “cruel scheme of terror” that left 10 people dead around the Washington area.

The court brushed aside arguments that Muhammad could not be sentenced to death under state law because he was not the triggerman. And it rejected claims that the post-Sept. 11 terrorism law under which he was prosecuted is unconstitutionally vague.

“If society’s ultimate penalty should be reserved for the most heinous offenses, accompanied by proof of vileness or future dangerousness, then surely this case qualifies,” Justice Donald Lemons wrote.

Muhammad was convicted on two counts of capital murder for the shooting of Dean Harold Meyers in Virginia during the three-week killing spree in October 2002.

‘I’ve had my fingers crossed’
“I’ve had my fingers crossed all these months,” said Prince William County Commonwealth’s Attorney Paul Ebert, who prosecuted Muhammad. “Now I can uncross them.”

Peter D. Greenspun, a lawyer for Muhammad, said he and co-counsel Jonathan Shapiro were “extremely disappointed.”

“There is a significant dissent, so we are going to review the entirety of the decision and continue to do everything we can to protect John Muhammad’s interests and save his life,” Greenspun said.

The Supreme Court unanimously affirmed the conviction based on the terrorism law but split 4-3 in upholding the conviction under the triggerman rule.

The court’s majority found that even if Muhammad’s teenage accomplice, Lee Boyd Malvo, pulled the trigger, Muhammad was eligible for the death penalty as an “immediate perpetrator” of slaying.

‘Cruel scheme of terror’
“Muhammad, with his sniper team partner, Malvo, randomly selected innocent victims,” Lemons wrote. “With calculation, extensive planning, premeditation and ruthless disregard for life, Muhammad carried out his cruel scheme of terror.”

The dissenting justices said Muhammad’s actions — positioning the sniper team’s car and telling Malvo when to fire — “were of the same character as those of a lookout or wheelman in a robbery.”

more

No. But...20 years? 20 days is long enough, I think. Is there any benefit to keeping them alive for even that long?
 

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