Man Convicted in Movie Theater Attack Case Declined by State Supreme Court

The California Supreme Court has declined to review the case of a man who stabbed a fellow moviegoer with a digital thermometer and injured two others who tried to intervene. The incident occurred at a movie theater in Lancaster after the man’s companion was asked to turn off her cell phone. The defense argued that the man could not be convicted of attempted murder under current state law, but the appeal was rejected by the appellate court panel. The man, Landry Boullard, is currently serving a prison sentence of 40 years and four months to life for his actions. He was found guilty of attempted murder, possession of a firearm by a felon, and assault with a deadly weapon. The appellate court panel discovered that the thermometer used in the attack was the same type used in an air-conditioning technician program that the defendant had attended. Boullard’s previous appeal, challenging the assault with a deadly weapon conviction, was denied in 2012. The court did not contest his convictions for the attempted murder and assault with a deadly weapon charges. The victim of the attack suffered permanent vision damage.

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