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Man Convicted in Fatal Mail Bomb Attack on Judge

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<i> From Associated Press</i>

A man who carried out a wave of mail bombings that raised racial tensions across the South in 1989 was convicted Tuesday in a blast that killed a federal judge. The jury recommended the electric chair.

Walter Leroy Moody Jr., 51, was found guilty in state court of murder and assault in an attack on U.S. 11th Circuit Judge Robert Vance, who died when he opened a package in his kitchen in Mountain Brook. Vance’s wife was wounded.

Moody already is serving seven life sentences without parole after being convicted in federal court of murdering Vance and a civil rights lawyer, threatening to kill 17 judges and sending two other bombs that were intercepted.

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No immediate sentencing date on the state charges was set. Alabama judges rarely overrule a jury’s recommendation.

Prosecutors contended that Moody, who is white, sent mail bombs to Vance, also white, and to black civil rights lawyer Robert Robinson of Savannah, Ga., out of frustration and hatred over being unable to overturn a 1972 conviction on a charge of possessing a pipe bomb.

Moody had once attended law school in Atlanta, but the felony record prevented him from ever becoming a lawyer.

“He was obsessed with getting that 1972 conviction overturned,” prosecutor Bob Morrow said.

One of the bombs that was intercepted was sent to the 11th Circuit’s headquarters in Atlanta.

Morrow said the bomb sent to Robinson was intended to make it appear a group such as the Ku Klux Klan was behind the judge’s murder. Another intercepted bomb was sent to the National Assn. for the Advancement of Colored People in Jacksonville, Fla.

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Both slayings took place in December 1989 and made many people nervous about opening packages during the Christmas season.

Following the bombings, all packages sent to the state Capitol and judicial buildings are screened, and people must pass through metal detectors to get into trials in state courts and to watch state legislative sessions.

Moody, a self-styled literary consultant, became a suspect after investigators found similarities between the devices used to kill Robinson and Vance and the pipe bomb that exploded at Moody’s home in 1972.

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