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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 16 page paper looks at the trial of the younger of the two Beltway Snipers who terrorized the Washington D.C. area in the Fall of 2002. An investigation of the pair is launched. Information about the trial up until September 25, 2003 is discussed. The paper was written during the Malvo trial and prior to verdict. Details about events and the case are relayed including defense strategy, evidence and Malvo's confession. Bibliography lists 16 sources.
Page Count:
16 pages (~225 words per page)
File: RT13_SA328Mvo.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
had to brace for yet another dilemma. Suddenly, without warning and without reason, people were falling like flies in and around Washington, D.C. It was a mystery like no other
in recent times. People would be filling their tanks or walking in a mall parking lot, and would be unexpectedly shot down. Of course, it was only a handful of
people who were killed or hurt, but still, the randomness of the attacks is what is so difficult to deal with. How does one walk out alone at night, not
knowing if they might be shot to death? The region lived in fear. At first, there were theories and it was thought that people were targeted who were filling up
gas or performing certain tasks. In fact, the Guardian Angels sent down some of its members to pump gas for the vulnerable travelers and area residents. A sniper was loose
and no one knew when he would hit next. People had different theories, counted the number of days in between attacks, and wondered whether or not he would strike on
the weekend or the weekday. And there were similarly so many theories about the profile, most of which was wrong. It was not a stereotypical serial or spree killer--a middle
aged white guy with an agenda--nor was it a criminal type. As it turned out, it was a man and a boy who for no explicable reason went on this
killing spree, in the context of a case that leaves more questions than provides answers. John Allen Muhammad and his young accomplice Lee Boyd Malvo, a.k.a. John Lee Malvo,
had been charged with 13 shootings, inclusive of 10 deaths, during their three-week crime spree that encompassed the states of Maryland, Virginia, as well as Washington, D.C. ("Malvo Sniper
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