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| White Victims of Dark Crime A collection of news stories documenting the imminent dangers of multiculturalism, integration, and miscegenation. |
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#1
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Defense of Snipers Cost Virginia Taxpayers Nearly $2 Million
Lee Boyd Malvo 's defense cost Virginia taxpayers slightly more than $1 million, and the defense of fellow sniper John Allen Muhammad has totaled about $900,000 so far, according to figures released last week
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#2
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MANASSAS, Virginia (CNN) -- A Virginia judge Tuesday sentenced John Allen Muhammad to death for killing Dean Harold Meyers -- one of 10 people shot to death during the October 2002 sniper shootings.
http://www.cnn.com/2004/LAW/03/09/sniper/index.html |
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#3
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Well, looks like the n-gger "who wasn't there" is going to get burned (eventually)
. Now it's time to transfer his bitch Malvo to a jurisdiction, say Alabama, where he's charged with a capital crime, and nail him too. Actually, the public would have great closure if the execution were public, or maybe shown on pay TV!
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#4
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DEATH PENALTY FOR WASHINGTON SNIPER
Washington sniper John Allen Muhammad has been sentenced to death for his role in masterminding the murder of 10 people in 2002. <a href='http://www9.sbs.com.au/theworldnews/region.php?id=80470 |
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#5
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DEATH PENALTY FOR WASHINGTON SNIPER
Washington sniper John Allen Muhammad has been sentenced to death for his role in masterminding the murder of 10 people in 2002. http://www9.sbs.com.au/theworldnews/region...=80470‚®ion=4 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ So why cant we do the same for rapists ??
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#6
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CHESAPEAKE, Virginia (CNN) -- A Virginia judge Wednesday formally sentenced Lee Boyd Malvo to life in prison without parole for his role in the October 2002 Washington-area sniper killings.
http://www.cnn.com/2004/LAW/03/10/sn...lvo/index.html |
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#7
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Lee Malvo
![]() Convicted Sniper Sentenced To Life Without Parole Lee Malvo accepted a deal Tuesday in Virginia in which he avoids the death penalty but gets life without parole for the second of 10 sniper slayings that terrorized the Washington area in October 2002. He's already serving one life sentence. The 19-year-old entered what is called as an Alford plea. It's not a guilty plea, but he admits that the government has enough evidence to convict him. Last year, he was convicted in the murder of FBI analyst Linda Franklin in a Home Depot parking lot. But jurors spared him the death penalty. Tuesday's plea comes in the death of Philadelphia businessman K enneth Bridges, 53, who was shot at a Spotsylvania County, Va., Exxon Station. He also was sentenced to life for the shooting of Caroline Seawell on Oct. 4. She recovered. A prosecutor said Malvo isn't getting a break, pointing out that he'll never be released. Malvo's lawyer said accepting the agreement is in his client's interest because he faces possible death penalty prosecutions elsewhere. Fellow sniper John Muhammad has been sentenced to death. Malvo and Muhammad still face charges in other localities and other states. ****************** Quote:
mbership in nigger heaven? T.N.B. |
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#8
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http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main...25/ixnews.html
![]() The sniper's plan: kill six whites a day for 30 days (Filed: 25/05/2006) One of the two snipers who murdered 10 people in a killing spree that terrorised Washington has revealed their plans to kill hundreds of children, policemen and rescue workers in an attempt to shut down cities across the country. John Allen Muhammad, 45, and his accomplice, Lee Boyd Malvo, 21, brought America's capital to a standstill in 2002 as they picked off white targets at petrol stations and shops in the city's prosperous suburbs. Muhammad: ?a coward? Malvo testified that Muhammad, driven by hatred of America because of its "slavery, hypocrisy and foreign policy" and his belief that "the white man is the devil", planned to kill six whites a day for 30 days. Malvo alleged that Muhammad had said: "We are going to go to the Washington DC area and we are going to terrorise these people." They then intended to move to Baltimore for stage two of their campaign, to shoot a policeman and then blow up explosives at his funeral. More explosives would target the ambulances that would then rush to the funeral. Another plan to kill three busloads of schoolchildren was thwarted because the pair were arrested when Malvo fell asleep while keeping watch at a Maryland petrol station. Malvo: couldn't shoot a pregnant white woman Muhammad's ultimate plan, Malvo testified, was to indoctrinate 140 young homeless men at a Canada compound who would "shut things down" in cities across America, unless they received ?5 million. Malvo had originally confessed to being the man who pulled the trigger because, as the you nger defendant, he was likely to escape the death penalty. He has now admitted only one killing. The other murders were allegedly carried out by Muhammad, who crawled into the back of their converted blue Chevrolet and shot the victims as they filled their cars with petrol, did their shopping or waited at bus stops. The attacks left the Washington suburbs transfixed with terror. People knelt down by their rear wheels to pump petrol or sprinted into shops from their cars to avoid the snipers. Muhammad had treated Malvo like an adopted son, but now the two have turned on each other in a dramatic courtroom confrontation as Muhammad, acting as his own lawyer, cross-examines his former accomplice. Malvo's cross-examination, which began on Tuesday, continued yesterday before a court in Rockville, Maryland, outside Washington. "I think he's a coward," Malvo said of the man he had called his father, before turning to him in court and calmly saying: "You took me into your house and made me a monster. You fed me, you clothed me and you made me your child." Malvo further testified that Muhammad wanted him to shoot pregnant white women. At one moment, he even had a pregnant woman in his sights in a fast-food restaurant. "I just couldn't take the shot," said Malvo. Between asking questions of his old prot?g?, Muhammad watched calmly, his chin resting on his hand, as Malvo, on the verge of tears, revealed the full gruesome extent of their plans. In each attack, Malvo, on look-out duty, gave the order to fire to Muhammad who lay in the back of the car, pointing his rifle through a hole cut above the rear number plate. When there were no witnesses, Malvo gave the signal to shoot, saying: "You got a go." Muhammad has been convicted of murder in Virginia where he is on Death Row and is now on trial for six of the killings in neighbouring Maryland. Muhammad claims that both men are innocent of the six murder charges, while Malvo has already pleaded guilty, accepting six life sentences without parole. n Maryland prosecutors wanted a second trial in case the Virginia conviction is overturned on appeal. |
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#9
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![]() Sarah Dillon, right, and her husband Billy Dillon, talk about the loss of their son, while holding their son's niece. Mom discovers son may have been sniper victim COLLINSVILLE, Texas (AP) -- When her son was shot and killed in 2002, Sarah Dillon got a button that read "Billy Gene Dillon is a very important person" and vowed to wear it until a suspect was found. That button was still clasped above her heart Friday after Dillon learned that Washington-area sniper Lee Boyd Malvo reportedly told authorities that he and his one-time mentor were responsible for her son's death and three other unsolved shootings. "It's never really going to be closure to me," said Dillon, 59, whose son was believed to be killed by a high-powered rifle while doing landscaping work. "It will help me rest knowing who did it." The Washington Post, citing two people familiar with the case, reported that Malvo told authorities this spring that months before the October 2002 sniper spree, he and John Allen Muhammad killed two men in California and Texas and wounded two others in Florida and Louisiana. (Full story) The newspaper said the sources spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the information. Billy Gene Dillon was found dead between a fence and a road May 27, 2002, outside a rural Denton County home about 40 miles north of Dallas. He was 37. Authorities said they met with federal agents in October 2002 to explore whether his death was related to the Washington-area shootings, in which 10 were murdered and three wounded in a three-week period. It "had all the earmarks of a random shooting" with a high-powered rifle, but tests on bullet fragments were inconclusive, said Denton County Sheriff's Department spokesman Tom Reedy. "We haven't been officially contacted by any law enforcement agency, so at this point in time this is strictly hypothetical," Reedy said. Albert Michalczyk, 76, of Oro Valley, Arizona, said the report answered his suspicions about who shot him on a Clearwater, Florida, golf course May 18, 2002. "My wife immediately thought it was these guys," said Michalczyk, who was struck in the upper chest by a bullet that police could not recover. "We put two and two together, but we never came up with four. Now, we are coming up with four." Clearwater police said they will investigate the report, but spokesman Wayne Shelor noted that the department previously worked with the Washington-area sniper task force in hopes of solving the case. "We have no evidence at all connecting our case to those," Shelor said. Other suspected victims were a man killed in Los Angeles during a robbery and a man who survived a robbery and shooting outside a shopping mall in Hammond, Louisiana, near Baton Rouge. The FBI's Los Angeles office was researching the claim, spokeswoman Laura Eimiller said. City police referred inquiries to the federal agency. Hammond, Louisiana, police Lt. Tommy Corkern said the department was in touch Friday with the FBI in New Orleans, trying to verify Malvo's statements in the shooting of 54-year-old John Gaeta. If that happens, police will take the case to prosecutors. "We plan to bring charges as soon as we can," Corkern said. After Muhammad and Malvo were arrested, authorities in Alabama, Arizona, Georgia, Louisiana and Washington state were able to link the pair to shootings in those states. Both were convicted in 2003 for sniper shootings in Virginia; Muhammad, 45, was sentenced to death and Malvo, 21, was given life in prison. Last month, a Maryland judge sentenced Muhammad to six life terms after he was convicted of six murders in Montgomery County, where the spree began and ended. Malvo testified against Muhammad and agreed to plead guilty to the same six Maryland murders. Malvo attorney William Brennan did not return phone calls Friday seeking comment. ************************************************* ![]() Billy Gene Dillon Family awaits confirmation of sniper's Denton claim Sarah and Billy Dillon wear buttons that proclaim "Billy Gene Dillon is a very important person." They weren't so sure, until now, that anyone else thought so. But on Friday their son's name appeared in newspaper articles nationwide, listed as a previously unpublicized victim of snipers John Allen Muhammad and Lee Boyd Malvo. |
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#10
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D.C. Sniper Confesses To Killing Ariz. Golfer
9:09 pm CDT October 27, 2006 60-Year-Old Shot On Golf Course TUCSON, Ariz. -- Convicted Washington-area sniper Lee Boyd Malvo confessed to police that he and cohort John Allen Muhammad were responsible for the 2002 killing of a 60-year-old man on a Tucson golf course, Tucson authorities said Friday. "He admitted to the killing of Jerry Taylor," said Capt. Bill Richards, commander of the Tucson Police Department's violent crimes division. Richards said Malvo spoke to police in Maryland for a two-hour period Thursday after he was granted immunity from prosecution. He said the shooting took place while he and Muhammad were in the area visiting Muhammad's older sister, Richards said. Tucson police had long sought to speak with Malvo about the March 19, 2002, death of Taylor, 60, who died from a single gunshot fired from long range as he practiced chip shots at the Tucson course. The case had never been conclusively tied to Muhammad and Malvo. Richards and Detective Benjamin Jimenez flew to Montgomery County, Md., this week to discuss the shooting. Jimenez said Malvo was contrite and said he was sorry for Taylor's family. "He welled up a few times in tears during the interview," Jimenez said. Jimenez said Malvo shot Taylor as he lay in the bushes and Taylor was retrieving golf balls. According to Malvo, the two decided to shoot someone on the golf course after conducting surveillance in the desert, Jimenez said. Authorities said Taylor's body was moved after the shooting and his wallet was near the body but nothing was taken. Richards said that Malvo agreed to testify against Muhammad if Pima County develops a solid enough case to bring charges. David Berkman, deputy county attorney for Pima County, said his office has not decided whether to prosecute Muhammad. "We don't have any of the (police) reports. We don't have any of the statements, and we have to make a decision whether there's sufficient evidence to go forward," Berkman said. "There's a lot of things that have to be considered." Muhammad and Malvo were arrested for killing 10 people and wounding three others in the Washington, D.C., area during three weeks in October 2002. They were accused of roaming the area with a Bushmaster .223-caliber rifle that they fired from the trunk of a Chevrolet Caprice at random victims. Malvo is serving a life term in Virginia for sniper shootings. He is in Maryland awaiting sentencing for six sniper killings in Montgomery County during October 2002. The two are suspects in earlier shootings that year in Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, Maryland and Washington state, and news reports have linked them to shootings in Florida, Texas and California. Both were convicted of separate Virginia killings in 2003. Muhammad was sentenced to death while Malvo was given a life prison term. They were sent to Maryland last year to stand trial for six killings in Montgomery County. Muhammad was convicted in May. Malvo is scheduled to be sentenced Nov. 9. Taylor's daughter, Cheryll Witz, said Malvo's confession brings closure for her and will allow her to move forward. She said she wrote Malvo a five-page letter in June imploring him to talk to Tucson detectives. She said she understood his life was difficult growing up without parents and understood how he could have fallen under the influence of Muhammad, who was a father figure to him. Malvo has previously testified that Muhammad trained him to shoot and lured him into a plot to kill people. "I do believe he was brainwashed and made to kill my father," Witz said. "(Muhammad's) a monster and he set out intentionally to kill p eople and he knew exactly what he was doing."
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Stupid Nigger Names
Anti-White Hate Crimes That Go Un-Prosecuted Racist Hoaxes / Hate Crime Hoax / Fake hate Crimes If Our Forefathers Could See Us Now, They'd Shoot Us Right Between The Eyes! |
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