After two days of occasional fumbling in the courtroom, sniper suspect John Allen Muhammad gave up trying to be his own lawyer Wed-nesday and put his fate back in the hands of his court-appointed attorneys.
``Mr. Muhammad no longer believes it is in his best interest to represent himself,'' Judge LeRoy Millette Jr. told the jury in the murder case.
Muhammad, 42, whose face is swollen from a chronic toothache, did not spell out his reasons in open court but assured the judge that it had nothing to do with his health.
Muhammad had stunned the judge and his own attorneys when he demanded the right to act as his own lawyer just as opening arguments in the capital case were to begin Monday.
After court adjourned Wednesday, Muhammad's lawyers, Peter Greenspun and Jonathan Shapiro, expressed relief that their client had changed course. They had served as standby counsel while Muhammad represented himself.
``You don't know how emotional it is for a lawyer with death on the table to be sidelined in deference to a defendant's right to represent himself,'' Shapiro said.
Prosecutors declined comment.
Though the judge said Muhammad represented himself competently, legal experts said he probably inflicted heavy damage on his case with a rambling opening statement that failed entirely to address the facts of the case.
During testimony, many of Mu-hammad's objections were overruled, and prosecutors objected to the way some of his questions to witnesses were posed, complaining that he was making gratuitous remarks or delving into irrelevant areas.
Muhammad is on trial for the slaying of Dean Harold Meyers, who was cut down by a single bullet at a Virginia gas station during the spree that left 10 people dead in the Washington area in October last year.
On Wednesday, the most dramatic testimony of the trial so far came from liquor store employee Muhammad Rashid, who was shot in the stomach in Brandywine, Ma-ryland, in September last year.
Rashid identified fellow sniper suspect Lee Boyd Malvo as the man who shot and robbed him while Rashid played dead so his attacker would not shoot again.
Prosecutors then played Rashid's emergency call in which he wailed for help for six minutes, telling the dispatcher: ``I am dying .... I am all by myself.''
Prosecutors said that ballistics evidence in the Rashid shooting will be linked to other shootings and that the robbery was one of several used to finance the sniper spree.
Another shooting survivor, Kellie Adams, testified Wednesday about an attack in Alabama that has been linked to the sniper suspects. Adams was wounded so seriously in the Sept. 21 last year shooting that she still must breathe through a tube. Her liquor store co-worker, Claudine Parker, died.
Adams said she saw only the legs of her attacker, but James Gray, who helped police chase the attacker, identified Malvo as the man he chased.
Prosecutors had complained about Muhammad's self-representation, even asking the judge at one point to stop him from serving as his own lawyer. They said Muhammad was receiving too much help from his two defense lawyers, whose role as standby counsel was supposed to be limited.
Experts said the two days of self-representation did more harm than good to Muhammad's case.
``The one thing he may have done that's positive is he revealed himself to the jury as a human being. He may have made it more difficult to recommend a death penalty,'' said Joseph Bowman, a veteran criminal defense attorney who has handled death penalty cases in Virginia.
Malvo is scheduled to go on trial separately next month in the slaying of an FBI analyst.
He also faces the death penalty if convicted.
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