D.C. Sniper Lee Boyd Malvo who massacred 10 victims in 22-day shooting spree talks of exceptionally exciting post-shooting sex with older male accomplice in new doc
Lee Boyd Malvo was 17 when he and John Allen Muhammad indiscriminately shot 10 people and wounded 3 more in 2002 rampage that paralyzed D.C.
He previously claimed Muhammad brainwashed and molested him while coercing him to commit the murders
In a new documentary for Vice, I, Sniper, Malvo, now 36, said the pair had exciting sex after committing some of the murders Muhammad was master puppeteer, I was an instrument, he tells filmmakers
Malvo is serving a life sentence in Virginia s Red Onion State Prison without the prospect of ever being released
DC sniper attacks to be covered in new documentary series
By FOX 5 Digital Team
Published
A new documentary series will examine the 2002 Washington D.C.-area sniper murders.
WASHINGTON - A new documentary series will examine the Washington, D.C.-area sniper murders.
Documentarians also interviewed Lee Malvo, who along with John Allen Muhammad, killed ten people and left three wounded during the shooting spree that terrorized the Washington D.C., region for three weeks in October of 2002. Filmmakers said they interviewed Malvo over the course of several years – all in 15-minute blocks – in order to stay within the prison rules.
Lee Malvo’s account of how he ended up shooting strangers while hiding inside a Chevy Caprice trunk is at the heart of “I, Sniper,” a documentary series on the sniper shootings in Maryland-Washington, D.C., on Vice TV that starts Monday.
Photograph via iStock.
A documentary series exploring the sniper spree that terrorized the DC area 19 years ago is premiering Monday, May 10 on Vice TV.
I, Sniper, an eight-episode production, features several interviews with Lee Boyd Malvo, who carried out the shootings with John Allen Muhammed in October 2002.
Malvo was 17 years old when he and Muhammad killed 10 people in random shootings across the region. He is currently incarcerated at Virginia’s Red Onion State Prison, serving four life sentences without parole (Muhammed was executed in 2009). Producer Mary-Jane Mitchell interviewed Malvo for 17 hours in 15-minute increments, restricted by the imposed time limit for phone calls at the prison.
Documentary series revisits 2002 Washington sniper case
by Mark Kennedy, The Associated Press
Posted May 5, 2021 11:19 am EDT
Last Updated May 5, 2021 at 11:28 am EDT
FILE - Sniper shooting suspect John Lee Malvo is escorted from court after his preliminary hearing in Fairfax, Va., on Jan. 14, 2003. An eight-episode docuseries, “I, Sniper,” features Lee Malvo, half of a two-man sniper team that killed 10 and terrorized the Washington D.C. region in 2002. The filmmakers coaxed Malvo to examine his life over 17 hours of phone calls. The series starts Monday on Vice TV. (AP Photo/ Pablo Martinez Monsivais, File)
NEW YORK The voice on the phone is steady and clear. “It is unnatural to kill anything,” the man says. “But once you’ve done it the first time, it becomes easier each time.”