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Date published: 4/16/2003 (Tacoma, Washington-AP) -- DNA tests haven't linked sniper suspects John Allen Muhammad and Lee Boyd Malvo to a February 2001 killing in Tacoma, Washington. A prosecutor said today that a shell casing found at the scene didn't turn up any of Muhammad or Malvo's DNA. Investigators sent the casing to an FBI lab hoping to find skin cells or some other sample that might provide evidence in the killing of 21-year-old Keenya Cook. Other circumstantial evidence links Muhammad and Malvo to the case. A witness has come forward to say that Muhammad and Malvo stayed with him and had access to the handgun used in the shooting. Cook's aunt, Isa Nichols, did some accounting for Muhammad's auto repair business. But prosecutors aren't filing any charges yet.
(Copyright 2003 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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