Photo of Dean Harold Meyers in Vietnam: http://media.hamptonroads.com/images/news/muh1119d.jpg
http://home.hamptonroads.com/guestbook/journal.cfm?id=53 "Judge LeRoy F. Millette Jr. thanked the jurors and attorneys for their service, saying it was 'the best presented case I've ever seen.' " If in the same shopping center, then in the same parking area, the parking area where Meyers was shot, hence Muhammad is placed at the crime scene by Linda Thompson. The trouble is that the First Virginia bank is a mile from the Sunoco gas station where Meyers was shot, and neither bank or gas station are in any shopping center. Eight lanes of asphalt, a grass median strip, and two sidewalks also separate the bank from the gas station, as well as a mile of intervening distance. http://ph.groups.yahoo.com/group/cia-drugs/photos/view/8cda?b=2&m=f&o=0 map showing bank and gas station a mile apart What the witness really does is place Muhammad and Malvo a mile from the crime scene "shortly before the shooting", like Oswald seen in the Dallas school textbook repository lunchroom when JFK was shot. A famous photographer later took a picture of Oswald's lunch upstairs with Oswald's rifle, nuance-nuance-nudge-nudge. http://home.hamptonroads.com/guestbook/journal.cfm?startrow=481&question=1&id=53 4:56 PM Oct. 20 Linda Frances McCarty Thompson, an employee of a First Virginia Bank IN THE **S H O P P I N G C E N T E R** WHERE MEYERS WAS KILLED, testified that she saw a "light-colored" Chevrolet with New Jersey license plates occupied by two "black gentlemen" parked OUTSIDE THE BANK SHORTLY BEFORE THE SHOOTING. Prosecutors displayed large photos of the blue Chevrolet Caprice. Thompson she said it appeared to be the car she saw. Lee Boyd Malvo was briefly brought into the courtroom in a bright orange-red jumpsuit. The witness identified him as one of the men in the car. "He had more hair, but that's him," she said. The woman said she did not go immediately to police with her information about the car because "I didn't want to get involved," but later she decided that the authorities should know what she had seen. "Was it because we was black that you remember us?" Muhammad asked her. "I don't think so," she said, saying it was the New Jersey license tags that made her suspicious. "I'm a banker," she explained, saying she was trained to look for anything suspicious. Thompson said she had called the staff of the bank to warn them that two men were in the parking lot and to ask them to let her know if they were still there when they left the bank. As the witness repeated her story about seeing the car in the bank parking lot, Muhammad politely repeated, "Yes, ma'am," several times. Muhammad asked the woman whether she had seen him shoot anybody. Had she seen him with a rifle in his hand? She said she had not. http://home.hamptonroads.com/guestbook/journal.cfm?startrow=191&question=1&id=53 10:55 AM Nov. 12 Tue Vu, a 25-year-old teller at the First Virginia Bank in Manassas, Va., testified that he was working at the bank the day Dean Meyers was killed while pumping gas at a nearby filling station. Vu testified that the manager of the bank at the time, Linda Thompson, had never called him to report a man parked in the bank's parking lot. Under cross-examination, Vu testified that he was off the day after the shooting and that if a meeting took place of all employees of the bank he would not have been present. http://home.hamptonroads.com/guestbook/journal.cfm?startrow=171&question=1&id=53 10:08 AM Nov. 13 Karen Lynn Bissett of Manassas, Va., an employee of the First Virginia Bank near the gasoline station in Manassas where Dean Meyers was killed on Oct. 9, 2002, testified that she had received a telephone call from her manager, Linda Thompson, informing her that a suspicious car was parked in the bank's parking lot and that she should be careful. Another bank employee, Tue Vu, testified on Wednesday that he had never received such a call from Thompson. On cross-examination by defense attorney Peter Greenspun, Bissett admitted that she had initially confused the date of the call when talking to a police investigator.