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		Killer of John Lennon loses parole bid 
		for tenth time 
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		 [August 24, 2018] 
		By Peter Szekely 
 NEW YORK (Reuters) - The man who gunned 
		down rock icon John Lennon nearly 38 years ago failed in his tenth try 
		to win freedom from a prison sentence that could keep him behind bars 
		for the rest of his life, New York prison authorities said on Thursday.
 
 A state board denied parole for Mark David Chapman, 63, after a hearing 
		and told him he would have to wait another two years until it considers 
		him for release again, the New York Department of Corrections and 
		Community Supervision said.
 
 "The panel has determined that your release would be incompatible with 
		the welfare and safety of society," a three-member panel of the state 
		Board of Parole told Chapman in a letter.
 
 Chapman, who has previously said he was severely troubled when he shot 
		the former Beatle and was seeking to gain notoriety, is serving 20 years 
		to life after pleading guilty to second-degree murder in 1981.
 
		
		 
		Known as inmate 81A3860, Chapman has been held at the Wende Correctional 
		Facility in Alden, New York, just east of Buffalo, since 2012 when he 
		was transferred from Attica, about 15 miles away.
 Lennon had recently ended a musical hiatus with the release of his 
		"Double Fantasy" album when he returned to his home on Manhattan's Upper 
		West Side on Dec. 8, 1980 after a nighttime recording session. Chapman 
		was waiting for him outside and shot him four times in front of his wife 
		Yoko Ono.
 
 The assassination-style murder stunned the music world, a generation 
		that had grown up with "Beatlemania" and the city the British-born 
		musician had adopted as his home.
 
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			Mark David Chapman, who murdered John Lennon in 1980 is seen in this 
			January 2018 picture released by New York State Department of 
			Corrections and Community Supervision in Albany, New York, U.S., 
			July 26, 2018. Courtesy New York State Department of Corrections and 
			Community Supervision/Handout via REUTERS 
            
 
            Ono, 85, has steadfastly opposed parole for her husband’s killer, 
			who she previously has said poses a risk to her, Lennon’s two sons, 
			the public and himself.
 At his previous parole hearing in August 2016, Chapman described his 
			younger self as a sociopath with low self-esteem and suicidal 
			thoughts who was trapped by the inescapable idea of killing Lennon 
			to gain fame.
 
 "I was obsessed on one thing and that was shooting him so that I 
			could be somebody," said Chapman, whose recent prison photo shows a 
			much leaner man than the pudgy 25-year-old with wire-rim glasses who 
			was booked after the murder.
 
 "And 35 years later I see what a horrible decision that was and how 
			selfish it was," he added, according to a transcript.
 
 (Reporting by Peter Szekely in New York; Additional reporting by 
			Lisa Richwine in Los Angeles; Editing by Chris Reese)
 
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