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Sniper Suspects Charged in Killing of Virginia Woman

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From Associated Press

A Virginia prosecutor charged sniper suspects John Allen Muhammad and 17-year-old Lee Boyd Malvo with capital murder Wednesday in the killing of an FBI analyst, saying he believes he has sufficient evidence to go to trial immediately.

Muhammad and Malvo, who have been accused in 17 shootings in four states and Washington, D.C., were charged with murder in the Oct. 14 shooting of Linda Franklin in the parking deck of a Home Depot. They also were charged with using a firearm in the commission of a felony.

Fairfax Commonwealth Atty. Robert F. Horan Jr. said he waited longer than other prosecutors to bring charges because he wanted to see the evidence in the case. He said his decision to act now is “because I was satisfied I had enough evidence to go to trial.”

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It remained uncertain which jurisdiction will try the suspects first. Atty. Gen. John Ashcroft said Wednesday that the decision will be made after a “fact-driven analysis” of where prosecutors have the best evidence and the best law to bring about the death penalty.

“I think it’s well-understood on my part that I believe appropriate penalties for the kinds of atrocities that have been committed to include the ultimate sanction of the death penalty,” Ashcroft told reporters.

The two men have been accused of killing 12 people and wounding five in Alabama, Louisiana, Maryland, Virginia and Washington, D.C.

Muhammad was indicted in Fairfax County by a grand jury; Malvo was charged in a juvenile court petition, authorities said.

Horan, who wouldn’t discuss specific evidence in the case, rejected the idea that prosecutors have been bickering over who will try the snipers first. He called it “absolute nonsense.”

“It’s the duty of each of us to pursue homicide charges,” Horan said. He said he will respect Ashcroft’s decision about who prosecutes first, but that if the attorney general defers to the states, Virginia should go first because it has a strong death penalty statute “that has stood the test of time.”

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Horan added that if the case is sent to Virginia, he’ll meet with the prosecutors in Prince William and Spotsylvania counties, where fatal sniper shootings also took place, to decide who will prosecute first based on the best evidence.

Investigations are pending into several other shootings, including one in Arizona.

Law enforcement sources have said a laptop computer seized from Muhammad’s car was stolen Sept. 5 in a robbery-shooting outside a pizzeria in Prince George’s County, Md. An employee was wounded.

Federal prosecutors earlier filed charges against Muhammad under weapons and extortion laws that could bring the death penalty. Federal charges also have apparently been brought against Malvo, but officials will not say so because he is a juvenile.

State’s Atty. Douglas Gansler of Montgomery County, Md., who filed six murder charges against the suspects, said the ultimate decision rests with the federal government, which has the men in custody.

Ashcroft said he has met twice with FBI Director Robert S. Mueller III to discuss evidence in the case and is working closely with state investigators in reaching his decision.

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