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Norwood sentenced to life in prison in Lululemon killing Brittany Norwood, who was convicted of killing Jayna Murray, her co-worker at the Bethesda yoga store, was sentenced to life in prison without the chance of parole Friday in Montgomery County Circuit Court.
Jan. 27, 2012
Phyllis Murray, the mother of Jayna Murray, talks with her husband, David, after arriving at the Montgomery County courthouse for the sentencing of her daughter's killer, Brittany Norwood.
Mark Gail
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The Washington Post
Jan. 27, 2012
Montgomery County State's Attorney John McCarthy helps Phyllis Murray on their way to a press conference.
Mark Gail
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The Washington Post
Jan. 27, 2012
Montgomery County State's Attorney John McCarthy, left, talks with Phyllis and David Murray before a press conference.
Mark Gail
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The Washington Post
Jan. 27, 2012
Montgomery County State's Attorney John McCarthy, right, speaks after the sentencing, accompanied by Jayna's brother Hugh McCarthy, left, David Murray and Phyllis Murray. During a sentencing memo, McCarthy had said that Brittany Norwood would pose a "tremendous danger" if she were to be eligible for parole.
Mark Gail
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The Washington Post
Jan. 27, 2012
David Murray, Jayna Murray's father, speaks.
Mark Gail
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The Washington Post
Jan. 27, 2012
Phyllis Murray, with her husband, David, by her side, speaks to the media.
Mark Gail
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The Washington Post
Jan. 27, 2012
Brittany Norwood's defense attorney, Douglas Wood, speaks to the media after the sentencing. Norwood's attorneys said she was not in "her right state of mind" during the killing.
Mark Gail
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The Washington Post
Nov. 2, 2011
Phyllis Murray is embraced by family and friends at Montgomery County Circuit Court in Rockville.
Nikki Kahn
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The Washington Post
Nov. 2, 2011
Montgomery County State's Attorney John McCarthy walks hand in hand with Phyllis Murray to talk to the media after the verdict.
Mark Gail
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The Washington Post
Nov. 2, 2011
Phyllis and David Murray stand close as John McCarthy speaks. During his closing arguments, McCarthy stressed the brutal, slow nature of the attack.
Mark Gail
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THE WASHINGTON POST
Nov. 2, 2011
“There were dozens of opportunities, multiple times that she could have stopped this,” McCarthy said of Norwood in his closing argument Wednesday.
Nikki Kahn
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The Washington Post
Nov. 2, 2011
David and Phyllis Murray hold hands.
Mark Gail
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THE WASHINGTON POST
Nov. 2, 2011
Phyllis Murray, center, speaks to the media. “More than anything, I know the trauma our family has been feeling,” Phyllis Murray said after the trial. “I want no other family to go through this.”
Mark Gail
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THE WASHINGTON POST
Nov. 2, 2011
Brittany Norwood's attorney Douglas Wood speaks.
Nikki Kahn
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THE WASHINGTON POST
Nov. 2, 2011
In his closing, Wood called Norwood's acts “the product of someone who lost it.”
Nikki Kahn
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THE WASHINGTON POST
Nov. 2, 2011
Phyllis Murray is surrounded by family and friends.
Nikki Kahn
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THE WASHINGTON POST
Nov. 2, 2011
Members of the Murray family walk away from the courthouse.
Mark Gail
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THE WASHINGTON POST
Nov. 2, 2011
Medical examiner Dr. Mary Ripple, left, departs the Montgomery County Circuit Court after testimony in the trial in Rockville.
Nikki Kahn
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The Washington Post
Nov. 2, 2011
David and Phyllis Murray arrive at Montgomery County Circuit Court as the trial for the murder of their daughter went into its final day.
Nikki Kahn
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The Washington Post
Montgomery County Circuit Court
This crime scene photo is part of evidence that was presented in the trial of Brittany Norwood, who is accused of fatally bludgeoning Jayna Murray in March inside the Lululemon Athletica store in Bethesda,Maryland.
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AP
This photograph connects shoes to footprints found at the crime scene inside the Lululemon Athletica store in Bethesda and is being used as evidence in the trial of Brittany Norwood. Montgomery Country prosecutors say Norwood used the larger Reebok sneakers in the picture as part of her cover-up story. Norwood originally claimed that two masked men attacked her and victim Jayna Murray. Shoe print expert David McGill, however, testified in court on Tuesday, and said the male footprints “went in, but they never came out” of the store.
Montgomery County Circuit Court
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Via Associated Press
This crime scene photo was used as evidence in the trial of Brittany Norwood.
Montgomery County Circuit Court
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Via Associated Press
This photo shows blood splatters at the crime scene, part of evidence being used in the trial of Brittany Norwood.
Montgomery County Circuit Court
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AP
Oct. 27, 2011
Phyllis Murray enters the courthouse for the trial of Brittany Norwood, who is accused of fatally bludgeoning her daughter in March inside the Lululemon Athletica shop in Bethesda, at Montgomery County Circuit Court in Rockville, Md.
Jacquelyn Martin
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AP
Oct. 27, 2011
A hammer, identified on the evidence bag as having been found in a toolbox on scene with possible blood, is part of evidence that was presented by the prosecution in the trial of Brittany Norwood, who is accused of fatally bludgeoning Jayna Murray in March inside the Lululemon Athletica shop in Bethesda, is seen at Montgomery County Circuit Court.
Jacquelyn Martin
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AP
A photograph of the crime scene, marked State's Exhibit 84, is part of the evidence that was presented by the prosecution in the trial of Brittany Norwood, who is accused of fatally bludgeoning Jayna Murray in March inside the Lululemon Athletica shop.
Jacquelyn Martin
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AP
Oct. 27, 2011
A pink sneaker belonging to Jayna Murray is part of evidence that was presented by the prosecution in the trial of Brittany Norwood, who is accused of fatally bludgeoning Jayna Murray in March inside the Lululemon Athletica shop.
Jacquelyn Martin
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AP
Shown is a photo presented during the murder trial of Brittany Norwood in Rockville, Md. Norwood is on trial for the killing of co-worker Jayna Murray.
Mark Gail
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The Washington Post
Oct. 27, 2011
A photograph of the crime scene that was part of evidence presented by the prosecution in the trial of Brittany Norwood, who is accused of fatally bludgeoning Jayna Murray in March.
Jacquelyn Martin
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AP
Investigators say Brittany Norwood killed her Lululemon co-worker Jayna Murray and fabricated an account of the incident. Norwood is charged with first-degree murder.
Montgomery County Police
Oct. 26, 2011
Television cameramen record footage of the Murray family as they ride the escalator up to the courtroom at the Montgomery County Courthouse on the first day of the trial.
Mark Gail
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The Washington Post
Oct. 24, 2011
Family members of Brittany Norwood talk outside the courtroom as jury selection begins for Norwood’s trial. A television reporter identified these people as her sister, left, father, and mother.
Bill O'Leary
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The Washington Post
Oct. 26, 2011
Phyllis and David Murray, parents of Lululemon employee Jayna Murray, wait to go through the security station at the Montgomery County Courthouse on the first day of the murder trial.
Mark Gail
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The Washington Post
Oct. 26, 2011
Phyllis Murray, left, mother of Lululemon employee Jayna Murray, is hugged by a woman as they waited for Murray’s family members to clear the security station at the Montgomery County Courthouse on the first day of the trial.
Mark Gail
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The Washington Post
Oct. 26, 2011
Phyllis and David Murray, parents of Jayna Murray, enter the Montgomery County Courthouse in Rockville on the first day of the trial. Murray was killed on March 11 inside the Lululemon Athletica store in downtown Bethesda, where she was an employee.
Mark Gail
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The Washington Post
Oct. 24, 2011
Christopher A. Griffiths, left, and Douglas J. Wood, defense attorneys for Brittany Norwood, chat outside the courtroom during jury selection.
Bill O'Leary
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The Washington Post
Shown is a crime scene photo presented during the murder trial of Brittany Norwood in Rockville, Md.
Mark Gail
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The Washington Post
A photo of the Lululemon store's interior after the slaying, one of the state's exhibits.
Mark Gail
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The Washington Post
A prosecution exhibit is a photo showing what appear to be bloodstains on the exit door of Lululemon in Bethesda.
Mark Gail
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The Washington Post
Another of the prosecution's exhibits.
Mark Gail
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The Washington Post
A prosecution exhibit, another view of the Lululemon store's floor after the slaying.
Mark Gail
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The Washington Post
March 21, 2011
State's Attorney John McCarthy and Assistant State's Attorney Marybeth Ayers, both far right, make a statement after a bond hearing in the Jayna Murray murder case at the Montgomery County Courthouse. Officials decided to hold her alleged killer, Brittany Norwood, without bail.
Ricky Carioti
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The Washington Post
June 24, 2011
A stained-glass window emblazoned with the word "Love" pays tribute to 30-year-old Jayna Murray, who was killed at a Lululemon Athletica store in Bethesda in March.
Nikki Kahn
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The Washington Post
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