murder | Murder, She Wrote | Diagnosis: Murder | Murder on the Orient Express | O. J. Simpson murder case | Dial M for Murder | Murder Most Horrid | Anatomy of a Murder | Murder 2 | Parker–Hulme murder case | Murder By Death | Murder | A Perfect Murder | Women's Murder Club | Murder, My Sweet | Murder in the Cathedral | Murder, Inc. | Murder Call | Murder at the Vanities | All-American Murder | Women's Murder Club (TV series) | Virtual Murder | The Murder Junkies | The Innocent Man: Murder and Injustice in a Small Town | Screaming Bloody Murder | Murder, She Said | Murder-Set-Pieces | Murder on the Orient Express (1974 film) | Murder of Shaariibuugiin Altantuyaa | Murder Investigation Team |
At his court-martial, Killen was charged with premeditated murder and was alleged to have been aiming for his commanding officer, Major Roger E. Simmons.
An honorably discharged former Marine and Maryland resident, Bloodsworth was convicted in 1985 of sexual assault, rape, and first-degree premeditated murder for the 1984 rape and murder of a nine-year-old girl in Rosedale, Maryland.
In 1995, Stockman wrote an article for Guns & Ammo claiming that the Waco siege had been orchestrated by the Clinton administration in order "to prove the need for a ban on so-called 'assault weapons.'" He wrote further that "had Bill Clinton really been unhappy with what Attorney General Janet Reno ordered, he would not only have fired her, he would have had Reno indicted for premeditated murder."