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Lee Boyd Malvo life sentence overturned by US court

A US federal district court judge has overturned the sentence of Jamaican Lee Boyd Malvo, one of the two people convicted in the Washington DC area Beltway sniper attacks nearly 15 years ago.
  
The ruling was released today.  
 
Malvo was sentenced to life in prison without parole for the sniper-style attacks committed around the region in October 2002 along with John Allen Muhammad.
  
Malvo appealed to the court saying he should not have been sentenced to life without parole because he was 17 years old at the time of the murders and he based his appeal on the Supreme Court ruling in Miller versus Alabama.
  
The decision in the Supreme Court case ruled juveniles are constitutionally different from adults for the purposes of sentencing. It said juveniles have diminished culpability and greater prospects for reform which makes them less deserving of the most severe punishments.
                                                 
Judge Raymond Jackson agreed and made his ruling to vacate Malvo's sentence.                                          
  
Malvo was convicted in one trial in Virginia and entered a plea in another. He had previously filed two motions for writs of  habeas corpus that failed.  
 
Malvo's case has been remanded back to Spotsylvania County Circuit Court to issue a new sentence.  
  
Muhammad and Malvo used a rifle to shoot over a dozen people from a modified trunk of a car in random attacks in Maryland, Virginia and D.C.      

Malvo, who is now 32 years old, is currently being held at Red Onion State Prison, a super-maximum security prison in Virginia.                             

Muhammad was executed in 2009 for the killings.
  
Ten people were killed and three others were shot during a three-week period.



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