John Lennon’s killer denied parole for 14th time | John Lennon

The man who killed John Lennon outside the former Beatle’s Manhattan apartment building in 1980 has been denied parole for a 14th time, according to New York prison officials.

Mark David Chapman, 70, appeared before a parole board on 27 August, and the decision was recently posted online by the state department of corrections and community supervision.

Chapman fatally shot Lennon on the night of 8 December 1980, as the musician and his wife, Yoko Ono, were returning to their Upper West Side apartment. Lennon had signed an autograph for Chapman on a copy of his recently released album, Double Fantasy, earlier that day.

Chapman was arrested within minutes, sitting near the shooting scene with a copy of JD Salinger’s novel, The Catcher in the Rye.

Lennon was 40 years old.

Mark David Chapman. Photograph: AP

The transcript for the latest parole board hearing was not immediately available. But Chapman previously expressed remorse for the crime.

“I knew what I was doing, and I knew it was evil, I knew it was wrong, but I wanted the fame so much that I was willing to give everything and take a human life,” he told a parole board three years ago.

Chapman is serving a 20-years-to-life sentence at Green Haven correctional facility, north of New York City, according to online state corrections records.

His next parole hearing is in February 2027.

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