D.C. sniper Lee Boyd Malvo tells interviewer he was sexually abused by Muhammad

Video: In October 2002, John Allen Muhammad and Lee Boyd Malvo began a shooting spree in the Washington region that left 10 dead and three wounded. The duo paralyzed the region for more than three weeks before getting apprehended at a truck rest stop in Myersville, Md.

Lee Boyd Malvo, who with John Allen Muhammad terrorized the Washington area a decade ago in one of the nation’s most notorious killing sprees, told NBC’s “Today” show that he was sexually abused by Muhammad beginning at age 14 and continuing until they were arrested.

In a series of interviews with The Washington Post last month, Malvo flatly denied any sexual contact with Muhammad. But in a 40-minute telephone interview with “Today’s” Matt Lauer on Wednesday, he told a different story.

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The D.C. Snipers: 10 years later

PHOTOS | Ten years ago, John Allen Muhammad and Lee Boyd Malvo went on a killing spree that terrorized the D.C. area.

Sniper case still haunts those it touched

Sniper case still haunts those it touched

PHOTOS | Ten years after snipers John Allen Muhammed and Lee Boyd Malvo terrorized the region, the case still haunts those who were directly affected.

Lee Malvo: ‘I was a monster’

Lee Malvo: ‘I was a monster’

VIDEO | The Post’s Josh White describes his exclusive interview with convicted sniper Lee Boyd Malvo, who admits to feelings of guilt and details his relationship with John Muhammad.

Full interview: Lee Boyd Malvo

Full interview: Lee Boyd Malvo

AUDIO | Convicted sniper Lee Boyd Malvo talks with The Washington Post’s Josh White in an exclusive telephone interview from Red Onion State Prison in Virginia.

Post archives of the shootings

Post archives of the shootings

Find the Post’s coverage of the sniper shootings from 2002.

Malvo’s letter to a Post reporter

Malvo’s letter to a Post reporter

A letter Lee Boyd Malvo sent to Post reporter Josh White ahead of their prison interview.

“For the entire period when I was almost 15 until I got arrested, I was sexually abused by John Muhammad,” Malvo said in the interview, excerpts of which aired Thursday.

Malvo told Lauer that the reason he was speaking up for the first time about being abused by Muhammad “is because I am more mature. As far as the guilt that I carried around for several years, I dealt with that to a large extent for years. And now, I can handle this.”

Malvo also told Lauer there are victims of the pair’s shooting spree who have not been identified — a claim he has made in the past, including in last month’s Post interviews — and he indicated that he has reached out to the families of some of those victims.

Over 21 days in October 2002, the snipers ambushed 13 strangers in the Washington area, killing 10 of them.

Muhammad was executed for his role in the murder spree in 2009. Malvo, now 27, is serving a life sentence at Red Onion State Prison in southwest Virginia.

In a two-hour interview with The Post — his only face-to-face media interview — Malvo said he was not in any way sexually molested during his relationship with Muhammad and denied any sort of sexual relationship between the two.

He said that many people — including his father — have asked him about whether he was sexually involved with Muhammad and that he found such allegations “outlandish.”

Malvo told The Post he was sexually molested by a neighbor and by relatives as a boy in the Caribbean — he did not discuss specifics — but said he has been “celibate” throughout his life since. In the “Today” interview, he said he was sexually abused by a babysitter when he was 5 and by relatives a few years later.

Malvo also did not mention any such sexual contact with Muhammad in a recent book by defense mitigation expert Carmeta Albarus, in which Albarus provided a lengthy and detailed accounting of Malvo’s childhood and his reflections on the shootings.

The shootings appear to have erupted out of Muhammad’s fury at his ex-wife, who had moved away from Washington state with their children in secrecy and ended up living in suburban Maryland. Malvo told Lauer that he felt powerless to refuse Muhammad’s orders that he shoot at the victims they had targeted.

“I couldn’t say no,” he said. “I had wanted that level of love and acceptance and consistency for all of my life and couldn’t find it.”

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