FAIRFAX, Va. -- Sniper suspect Lee Boyd Malvo willingly confessed to some of the shootings during a police interview last fall, laughing as recalled shooting an FBI analyst in the head, prosecutors said in legal briefs made public Monday.
Malvo's lawyers assert that police manipulated a confession about his role in the spate of shootings that terrorized the Washington, D.C., area. He and fellow suspect John Allen Muhammad, 42, have been linked to 20 shootings, including 13 deaths, in Virginia, Maryland, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana and Washington, D.C.
In the documents, prosecutors say Malvo chuckled as he recalled the reaction of a boy he shot at and missed.
"Evidently, Malvo found it amusing that as the errant bullet flew past the boy's head he swatted at the air as if a bee had buzzed too close," wrote Fairfax County Deputy Commonwealth's Attorney Raymond F. Morrogh.
"Malvo actually smiled and chortled as he recounted this event."
Malvo's demeanor during the six-hour interview in November proves he was not intimidated by police into a confession, Morrogh wrote.
Malvo's lawyers want the confession tossed out. They argue that Malvo's lawyers were not present and that Malvo made it clear to police that he did not want to talk about the shootings. A hearing on the confession that both sides agree is critical is scheduled April 28.
In a 40-page brief filed earlier this month, defense lawyers argue that authorities undertook "covert and intentionally deceptive actions" to transfer Malvo to Virginia without the knowledge of his court-appointed lawyers at that time.
Prosecutors do not dispute that Malvo, who was 17 at the time of the Nov. 7 interrogation, asked police, "Do I get to see my attorneys?" and later said, "My attorneys told me not to say anything to the cops until they got there," before confessing. But Morrogh argued that those statements fall well short of the clear demand for a lawyer needed to stop the questioning.
When Malvo was first arrested, in late October, he said nothing to police who tried to question him.
But when he was transferred to Virginia for prosecution on Nov. 7, he allegedly opened up to Fairfax County homicide detective June Boyle, and FBI special agent Brad Garrett, who has been involved in many of the FBI's recent high-profile investigations.
"At times during the interview, Malvo laughed or smiled," Morrogh wrote. "For example, he laughed as he described shooting (FBI analyst Linda Franklin) at Home Depot in the head."
Malvo signed a waiver to his Miranda rights, which guarantee the right to remain silent and the right to a lawyer, with an 'X.'
Malvo's decision to sign with an 'X' demonstrates that he "obviously felt free to decide for himself how he would respond to police questions and requests," Morrogh wrote.
Defense lawyers, on the other hand, indicate that his refusal to sign his own name is a clear signal that he did not want to waive his rights.
Both suspects face the death penalty. Prosecutors have said the shootings that occurred during a three-week spree in October were part of a scheme to extort $10 million from the government.
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