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Moore gets life in federal prison: Virginia drug dealer eluded murder convictions

NORFOLK, VIRGINIA-- Life in federal prison.
That's what Terry Tyrone Moore, one of the Peninsula's most elusive criminals, will serve for conspiracy to distribute crack cocaine after being sentenced in U.S. District Court Thursday.

A federal jury convicted 33-year-old Moore in May of the conspiracy charge, along with three other drug distribution charges. He was sentenced to 40 years in prison on each of the other three drug charges.

"He's been a terror to society," said Judge Rebecca Beach Smith, as she pronounced sentence. "Terrorism cannot ever be projected by him again."

Smith made a point of saying that she rarely imposes a life sentence, but in Moore's case she believed he needed to be taken off the streets.

"He's a vicious criminal," she said.

Moore's federal convictions stem from several incidents of drug dealing that spanned from January 1997 to November 2001. During that time, Moore was buying and selling both crack and powder cocaine.

For years, Moore managed to escape conviction in several cases in which he was a suspect. Police and prosecutors say he intimidated witnesses, making him difficult to prosecute.

Moore was acquitted in two separate murder trials in Newport News - one in the 1995 killing of Richard Wayne Owens Jr. and one in the 1998 killing of James Taylor Jr.

In October, a Hampton jury found Moore guilty of five felony charges for shooting at two people at the Tradewinds Apartments off Magruder Boulevard in Hampton in 1996. He was given a 23-year prison sentence for that crime.

Virginia Police say Moore is still the main suspect in the 1998 slaying of Shawn Christopher Ray, who was gunned down at a pay phone outside a Hampton convenience store. Ray had been the primary witness in the Taylor murder trial. But without Ray to testify, Moore was acquitted. There has not been a trial in Ray's killing.

Christina Suiter, Ray's mother, sat in federal court Thursday with her husband and oldest son. She listened and nodded quietly as the judge gave Moore his sentence. Whenever Moore is in court, Suiter is there, too, hoping it will make her feel a little better.

It does help, she said, "knowing that he's in there - even if it's not for my son. He's paying for the crimes he's done."

After the difficulties of prosecuting Moore in Virginia courts, a task force of local and federal authorities began investigating him, which led to the federal drug charges.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Robert Bradenham argued Thursday for the maximum punishment because of Moore's long history with the law.

"Professional criminals rarely are punished for all of their criminal conduct," Bradenham said in court. "He's a dangerous man. The day he gets out he'll be a dangerous man. Therefore, it's important that we see that he does not get out."

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