INTERNET SOURCE:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Allen_Muhammad
Mug shot of John Allen Muhammad
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Born
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December 31, 1960
Baton Rouge, Louisiana, U.S. |
Died
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November 10, 2009 (aged 48)
Jarratt, Virginia, U.S. |
Cause of death
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Execution by lethal injection
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Other names
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The Beltway Sniper
The D.C. Sniper |
Religion
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Nation of Islam
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Criminal penalty
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Death
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Killings
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Number of victims
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10 killed, 3 injured (D.C. metropolitan area); 17
victims elsewhere
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Span of killings
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February 16, 2002–October 23, 2002
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Country
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United States of America
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State(s)
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Alabama, Arizona, California, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana,
Maryland, Texas, Virginia, Washington State, and Washington, D.C.
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Date apprehended
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October 24, 2002
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e 2002
Beltway sniper attacks, killing at least 10 people. Muhammad and Malvo were
arrested in connection with the attacks on October 24, 2002, following tips
from alert citizens. Although the pairing's actions were classified as
psychopathy attributable to serial killer characteristics by the media, whether
or not their psychopathy meets this classification or that of a spree killer is
debated by researchers.
Born as John Allen Williams, Muhammad joined the Nation of Islam in 1987 and later changed his surname to Muhammad. At Muhammad's trial, the prosecutor claimed that the rampage was part of a plot to kill his ex-wife and regain custody of his children, but the judge ruled that there was insufficient evidence to support this argument. His trial for one of the murders (the murder of Dean Harold Meyers in Prince William County, Virginia) began in October 2003, and the following month he was found guilty of capital murder. Four months later he was sentenced to death. While awaiting execution in Virginia, in August 2005, he was extradited to Maryland to face some of the charges there, for which he was convicted of six counts of first-degree murder on May 30, 2006.
Upon completion of the trial activity in Maryland, he was returned to Virginia's death row pending an agreement with another state or the District of Columbia seeking to try him. He was not tried on additional charges in other Virginia jurisdictions, and faced potential trials in three other states and the District of Columbia involving other deaths and serious woundings. All appeals of his conviction for killing Dean Harold Meyers had been made and rejected. Appeals for Muhammad's other trials remained pending at the time of his execution.
Muhammad was executed by lethal injection on November 10, 2009, at 9:06 pm EST at Greensville Correctional Center in Jarratt, Virginia, and was pronounced dead at 9:11 pm EST. Muhammad declined to make a final statement.
John Allen Muhammad |
Early
life and military service
Born
John Allen Williams in Baton
Rouge, Louisiana, to Ernest and Eva Williams, he and his family moved to New
Orleans when his mother was diagnosed with breast cancer; she died when he was
five. After his mother's death, his father left and he was raised mostly by his
grandfather and an aunt. Muhammad enlisted in the Louisiana Army National Guard
in 1979 and, after seven years of service, volunteered for active duty in 1986.
In 1987 he joined the Nation of Islam.
While
in the U.S. Army, Muhammad was trained as a mechanic, truck driver, and
specialist metalworker. He qualified with the Army's standard infantry rifle,
the M16, earning the Expert Rifleman's Badge. This rating is the Army's highest
of three levels of marksmanship for a basic soldier. He was discharged from
military service following the Gulf War, as a sergeant, in 1994 after service
in the Persian Gulf.
As
a member of the Nation of Islam, Muhammad helped provide security for the
"Million Man March" in 1995, but Nation of Islam leader Louis
Farrakhan has publicly distanced himself and his organization from Muhammad's
crimes. Muhammad kidnapped his children and brought them to Antigua around
1999, apparently engaging in credit card and immigration document fraud. It was
during this time that he became close with Lee Boyd Malvo, who later acted as
his partner in the killings. Williams changed his name to John Allen Muhammad
in October 2001.
After
his arrest, authorities also claimed that Muhammad admitted that he admired and
modeled himself after Osama bin Laden and al-Qaeda, and approved of the September
11 attacks. One of Malvo's psychiatric witnesses testified in his trial that
Muhammad had indoctrinated him into believing that the proceeds of the
extortion attempt would be used to begin a new nation of only young,
"pure" black people somewhere in Canada.
Muhammad
was twice divorced; his second wife, Mildred Muhammad, sought and was granted a
restraining order. Muhammad was arrested on federal charges of violating the restraining
order against him by possessing a weapon. Under federal law, those with
restraining orders are prohibited to purchase or possess guns as per the Lautenberg
Amendment to the Gun Control Act of 1968. Defense attorneys in the Malvo trial
and the prosecution in Muhammad's trial argued that the ultimate goal of the
killings was to kill Mildred so he would regain custody of his three children.
Beltway
sniper attacks
Main
article: Beltway sniper attacks
Police
followed a lead in which an anonymous caller told a priest to tell the police
to check out a liquor store robbery-murder that had occurred in Montgomery,
Alabama. Investigators responding to that crime scene found one of the suspects
had dropped a magazine with his fingerprints on it; these were subsequently
identified as belonging to a 17-year-old Jamaican immigrant, Lee Boyd Malvo,
whose prints were on file with the INS. Malvo was known to associate with
Muhammad. They had lived together in Tacoma, Washington for around one year,
where Malvo used the alias John Lee Malvo.
Muhammad's
identification led to the discovery that he had purchased a former police car,
a blue Chevrolet Caprice, in New Jersey on September 11, 2002. A lookout
broadcast to the public on that vehicle resulted in their arrest when it was
spotted parked in an Interstate 70 rest stop in Myersville, Maryland, just
outside of Frederick, Maryland.
Victims
Listed
in chronological order, below are the identified victims who were murdered or
wounded prior to the Beltway sniper attacks:
Name | Age | Status | Date of Attack | Location |
---|---|---|---|---|
Keenya Cook | 21 | Killed | February 16, 2002 | Tacoma, Washington |
Jerry Ray Taylor | 60 | Killed | March 19, 2002 | Tucson, Arizona |
Billy Gene Dillon | 37 | Killed | May 27, 2002 | Denton, Texas |
John Gaeta | 52 | Survived | August 1, 2002 | Hammond, Louisiana |
Paul LaRuffa | 55 | Survived | September 5, 2002 | Clinton, Maryland |
Rupinder Oberoi | 22 | Survived | September 14, 2002 | Silver Spring, Maryland |
Muhammad Rashid | 32 | Survived | September 15, 2002 | Brandywine, Maryland |
Million Woldemariam | 41 | Killed | September 21, 2002 | Atlanta, Georgia |
Claudine Parker | 52 | Killed | September 21, 2002 | Montgomery, Alabama |
Kellie Adams | 24 | Survived | September 21, 2002 | Montgomery, Alabama |
Hong Im Ballenger | 45 | Killed | September 23, 2002 | Baton Rouge, Louisiana |
Wright Williams, Jr. | 55 | Survived | September 26, 2002 | Baton Rouge, Louisiana |
NOTE: This list does not include two
victims who were not publicly identified. One man was shot and killed in a
robbery in Los Angeles, California in either February or March 2002 and the
other man, aged 76 and from Tucson, Arizona, was shot, but survived, on a Clearwater,
Florida golf course on May 18, 2002.
Listed
in chronological order, these are the names of the victims who were murdered or
wounded in the Beltway sniper attacks.
Criminal
case
Muhammad
was captured in Maryland, where most of the attacks and murders took place.
Although Maryland sought to bring him to trial, United States attorney general John
Ashcroft reassigned the case from the Maryland prosecutor Doug Gansler, a Democrat,
to a Republican prosecutor in Virginia, Jerry W. Kilgore. Kilgore was planning
to run for governor. Virginia was viewed as the more likely jurisdiction to provide
a death sentence, which was borne out by the Virginia and Maryland verdicts,
and Virginia also allowed the death penalty for juveniles.
In
October 2003, Muhammad went on trial for the murder of Dean Meyers at a Prince
William County service station near the city of Manassas. The trial had been
moved from Prince William County, to Virginia Beach, approximately 200 miles
away. Muhammad was granted the right to represent himself in his defense, and
dismissed his legal counsel, though he immediately switched back to having
legal representation after his opening argument.
Muhammad
was charged with murder, terrorism, conspiracy and the illegal use of a
firearm, and faced a possible death sentence. Prosecutors said the shootings
were part of a plot to extort $10 million from local and state governments. The
prosecution said that they would make the case for 16 shootings allegedly
involving Muhammad. The terrorism charge against Muhammad required prosecutors
to prove he committed at least two shootings in a three-year period.
The
prosecution called more than 130 witnesses and introduced more than 400 pieces
of evidence intended to prove that Muhammad undertook the murders and ordered
Malvo to help carry it out. Evidence included a rifle, found in Muhammad's car,
that was linked by ballistics tests not only to 8 of the 10 killings in the
Washington area but also to two others, in Louisiana and Alabama; the car
itself, which was modified so that a sniper could shoot from inside the trunk;
and a laptop computer, also found in the car, that contained maps with icons
pinpointing shooting scenes.
There
were also witness accounts that put Muhammad across the street from one
shooting and his car near the scene of several others. There was also a
recorded phone call to a police hotline in which a man, his voice identified by
a detective as Muhammad's, demanded money in exchange for stopping the
shootings.
Muhammad's
defense asked the court to drop the capital murder charges due to the fact that
there was no direct evidence. Malvo's fingerprints were on the Bushmaster rifle
found in Muhammad's car, and genetic material from Muhammad himself was also
discovered on the rifle, but the defense contended that Muhammad could not be
put to death under Virginia's "trigger-man law" unless he actually
pulled the trigger to kill Meyers, and no one testified that they saw him do
so.
On
November 17, 2003, by verdict of his jury, Muhammad was convicted in Virginia
of all four counts in the indictment against him: capital murder for the
shooting of Dean H. Meyers; a second charge of capital murder under Virginia's
antiterrorism statute, for homicide committed with an intent to terrorize the
government or the public at large; conspiracy to commit murder; and the illegal
use of a firearm. In the penalty phase of the trial, the jury, after five hours
of deliberation over two days, unanimously recommended that Muhammad should be
sentenced to death. On March 9, 2004, a Virginia judge agreed with the jury's
recommendation and sentenced John Allen Muhammad to death.
On
April 22, 2005, the Virginia Supreme Court affirmed his death penalty, stating
that Muhammad could be sentenced to death because the murder was part of an act
of terrorism. The court also rejected an argument by defense lawyers that he
could not be sentenced to death because he was not the triggerman in the
killings. Virginia Supreme Court Justice Donald W. Lemons said at the time,
"With calculation, extensive planning, premeditation and ruthless
disregard for life, Muhammad carried out his cruel scheme of terror."
In
May 2005, Maryland and Virginia reached an agreement to allow his extradition
to face Maryland charges, but Muhammad was fighting the action legally. He was
held at the maximum security Sussex I State Prison near Waverly in Sussex
County, Virginia, which houses Virginia's death row inmates. While awaiting execution
in Virginia, in August 2005, he was extradited to Montgomery County, Maryland
to face charges there.
On
May 30, 2006, a Maryland jury found John Allen Muhammad guilty of six counts of
murder in Maryland. In return, he was sentenced to six consecutive life terms
without possibility of parole on June 1, 2006. Neither Alabama, Arizona,
Louisiana, or Washington State moved to try Muhammad, given his death sentence
for murder in Virginia. In 2006, Malvo confessed that the pair also killed
victims in California, Arizona, and Texas, making 17 victims.
On
May 6, 2008, it was revealed that Muhammad asked prosecutors in a letter to
help him end legal appeals of his conviction and death sentence "so that
you can murder this innocent black man." An appeal filed by Muhammad's
defense lawyers in April 2008 cited evidence of brain damage that would render
Muhammad incompetent to make legal decisions, and that he should not have been
allowed to represent himself at his Virginia trial.
On
September 16, 2009, Muhammad's execution date was set for November 10, 2009. On
November 9, 2009, Muhammad's petition for review of his death sentence was
denied by the U.S. Supreme Court. Justice Stevens, joined by Justice Ginsburg
and Justice Sotomayor wrote a separate opinion stating that Virginia's rush to
set an execution date "highlights once again the perversity of
executing inmates before their appeals process has been fully concluded",
while noting that they concurred with the decision that the appeal ought not be
heard.
Civil
case
In
2003, 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. Although
Malvo and Muhammad were each believed to be indigent, codefendants Bull's Eye
Shooter Supply and Bushmaster
Firearms, Inc. contributed to a landmark $2.5 million out-of-court
settlement in late 2004.
Testimony
of Lee Boyd Malvo
In John Allen Muhammad's May 2006 trial in Montgomery County, Maryland, Lee Boyd Malvo, who is serving a sentence
of life without parole for his role in the shootings, took the stand and
confessed to a more detailed version of the pair's plans. Malvo, after
extensive psychological counseling, admitted that he was lying at the earlier
Virginia trial where he had admitted to being the triggerman for every
shooting. Malvo claimed that he had said this in order to protect John Allen
Muhammad from the potential death penalty, because it was more difficult to
achieve the death penalty for a minor. Malvo said that he wanted to do what
little he could for the families of the victims by letting the full story be
told. In his two days of testimony, Malvo outlined many very detailed aspects
of all the shootings.
Part
of his testimony concerned Muhammad's complete multiphase plan. His plan
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 DC area. This way after each shooting they would be able
to quickly leave the area on a predetermined path, and move on to the next
location. John Allen Muhammad's goal in Phase One was to kill 6 white people a
day for 30 days (180 per month). 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 be moved up to Baltimore. Malvo described how this phase was
close to being implemented, but never was carried out. Phase Two would begin
with the killing of a pregnant woman with a shot to the abdomen. The next step
would have been to shoot and kill a Baltimore City police officer. Then, at the
officer's funeral, they were to detonate several improvised explosive devices
complete with shrapnel. These explosives were intended to kill a large number
of officers, since many of them would be at a comrade's funeral.
Phase
Three was to take place very shortly after, if not during, Phase Two. The third
phase was to extort several million dollars from the United States government.
This money would be used to finance a larger plan to travel north into Canada,
stopping along the way in YMCAs and orphanages recruiting other impressionable
young boys with no parents or guidance. John Allen Muhammad thought he could
act as their father figure as he did with Lee Boyd Malvo. Once he recruited a
large number of young boys and made his way up to Canada, he would begin their
training. Malvo described how Muhammad allegedly intended to train the youths
with weapons. After their training was complete, Muhammad would send them out
across the United States to carry out mass shootings in many different cities,
just as he had done in Washington, D.C. and Baltimore.
Execution
On
September 16, 2009, a Virginia judge set a November 10, 2009, execution date
for Muhammad. On November 9, 2009, the Supreme Court of the United States
refused a last-minute appeal. On November 10, hours before Muhammad's scheduled
execution, pleas for clemency made by his attorneys were denied by Virginia
Governor Tim Kaine.
Under
Virginia law, an inmate is allowed to choose the method by which he or she will
be put to death, either lethal injection or electrocution. Because Muhammad
declined to select a method, by law, the method of lethal injection was
selected for him. He was offered a selection of a last meal, which he accepted,
but refused publication of its contents. However, J. Wyndal Gordon, Muhammad's
attorney, told the Associated Press that Muhammad's last meal consisted of
"chicken and red sauce, and some cakes".
The
execution began at 9:00 p.m. EST at the Greensville Correctional Center in Jarratt,
Virginia. According to the official statement of the prison spokesperson, the
actual lethal injection process started at 9:06 pm EST. He was then
pronounced dead at 9:11 p.m. EST; he declined to make a final statement.
His body was cremated and given to his son in Louisiana.
In
popular culture
- Muhammad is portrayed by Bobby Hosea in the 2003 film, D.C. Sniper: 23 Days of Fear.
- Muhammad is portrayed by Ken Foree in the 2010 film D.C. Sniper.
- Muhammad is portrayed by Isaiah Washington in the 2013 film, Blue Caprice.
OTHER
LINKS:
MY
THOUGHTS:
Unlike other States
in the America, John Allen Muhammad was executed in six years after being
sentenced to death on November 17, 2003 and seven years after committing his
killing spree, he was not executed ‘voluntarily’ (state suicide assist). I hope
other states can follow Virginia’s example, as they did it with Michael William Lenz.
The D.C. Sniper was
another danger to society and he now belongs to The Legion of Doom: The 13 Dead
Terrorists. Assuming if he was never caught, he might have succeeded in bombing
buildings and not just shooting, in order to continue with his reign of terror.
Keep in mind, he has military training like Timothy McVeigh.
Please go to the Unit1012 Blog to hear from the victims’ families.
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