One often hears others say about a juvenile offender that he was led astray by others. A frequently applied term is that he is a "follower" and not an instigator or a leader. At the heart of such characterizations is the view that a youth should not be held accountable for wrong doing when his behavior resulted from his going along with a person who was persuasive. In the Washington, D.C. sniper case, purportedly, Lee Malvo at the age of 17, behaved in a manner that was out of keeping with his own personality because he was under the influence of a much older man, John Muhammad. Mr. Malvo's attorneys asserted in his defense that Lee Malvo was a victim of Mr. Muhammad because he was emotionally needy and desperately in search of a father figure. Thus, he was suggestible to all that Mr. Muhammad had to teach him, resulting in his killing innocent people whom he did not know. This defense was not persuasive to the jury that tried Mr. Malvo and gave him a life sentence.
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