Boston bomber sentenced to death

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Boston bomber sentenced to death
By Bob Fredericks

May 15, 2015 | 2:55pm

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Photo: EPA (main); Reuters (inset)
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Boston Marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev was sentenced to death Friday for the 2013 terror attack — and he reacted by flashing a wry grin and pointing his fingers like a gunslinger.

The same jury that found him guilty on April 8 of all 30 counts — including murder and use of a weapon of mass destruction — announced its verdict in a packed but silent federal courtroom in Boston at about 3:15 p.m. after deliberating for only 14 hours.

The 21-year-old self-radicalized Muslim — who with his brother, Tamerlan, planted two bombs at the marathon’s finish line, killing three and injuring 260 — showed little emotion as his fate was read.

But the remorseless jihadi, in a blazer and a collared shirt, smiled and pointed his index fingers as if firing pistols when US Marshals led him away, a witness told CNN.

US Attorney Carmen Ortiz lauded the jury, calling it a “fair and just verdict,” and said the case showcased the fairness of the US justice system.

“Even the worst of the worst deserve a fair trial and due process of law,” Ortiz said outside the courthouse.

She defended the government’s decision to seek the death penalty, citing the heinous nature of the attack and Tsarnaev’s lack of remorse and depraved indifference to human life and suffering.

“It was a political crime designed to intimidate and coerce the United States. Dzhokhar Tsarnaev will pay with his life,’’ Ortiz said. “Our thoughts should turn away from the Tsarnaev brothers for good.”

His lawyers – who argued that Dzhokhar was merely under the spell of his violent brother – will appeal. They left court without commenting.

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Courtroom sketch of Tsarnaev after he was sentenced on Friday.Photo: Reuters

Boston Mayor Marty Walsh said he hoped the verdict provided “a small measure of closure” for the families of the dead and injured, 17 of whom lost limbs.

“We will forever remember and honor those who lost their lives and were affected by those senseless acts of violence on our city,” he said.

US Attorney General Loretta Lynch called the punishment fitting.

“No verdict can heal the souls of those who lost loved ones, nor the minds and bodies of those who suffered life-changing injuries from this cowardly attack. But the ultimate penalty is a fitting punishment for this horrific crime,” Lynch said.

Boston Police Commissioner William Evans said, “We’ve sent a strong message that we’re not going to tolerate terrorism in our country.”

Tsarnaev’s father, Anzor Tsarnaev, an ethnic Chechen, was indignant.

“We will fight. We will fight. We will fight until the end,” he told ABC News, which had reached him in the Russian region of Dagestan.

Federal Judge George O’Toole Jr. will impose the sentence at a hearing in which Tsarnaev’s victims will be allowed to confront the madman. He will also have the right to speak after not taking the stand during his trial.

After the verdict was read, O’Toole told jurors, at least three of whom were wiping away tears, “You should be justly proud of your service in this case,” The Boston Globe reported.

The seven-woman, five-man jury decided Tsarnaev should be killed on the counts related to the deaths of Boston University grad student Lingzi Lu, 23, and 8-year-old Martin Richard, the attack’s youngest victim.

Tsarnaev was directly responsible for their murders, having placed the backpack pressure-cooker bomb that killed them.

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Martin RichardPhoto: AP

The jurors chose not to sentence Tsarnaev to death for the second bomb, which was placed by his brother and killed Krystle Campbell, 28, of Arlington, Va.

They also did not impose the death penalty for the murder of MIT Police Officer Sean Collier, whom the defense had argued was shot by Tamerlan.

Only three jurors bought the defense’s argument that Tsarnaev had been influenced by his older brother.

The panel unanimously agreed Tsarnaev — who often clowned in court during the penalty phase of his trial — showed no remorse.

The appeals process, meanwhile, could take years.

The US Court of Appeals for the 1st Circuit in Boston will review Tsarnaev’s case, which could wind up before the US Supreme Court.

He will remain jailed in Massachusetts until after he’s formally sentenced, and it is expected he will be taken to the federal pen in Terre Haute, Ind., where he would become the youngest person on federal death row.

Tamerlan Tsarnaev was killed April 19, 2013, following a shootout with Watertown, Mass., cops, who shot him before he was run over by an SUV driven by a fleeing Dzhokhar.

Dzhokhar was captured 17 hours later, wounded and hiding in a boat in a yard.

Tsarnaev scribbled a explanation for his barbarism in the boat, saying the United States was “killing our innocent civilians. We Muslims are one body, you hurt one you hurt us all.”

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Dzhokhar Tsarnaev leaves the scene of the explosions at the Boston Marathon in April 2013.Photo: AP

Prosecutor Steven Mellin, in his closing argument, quoted a line from the note.

“Now I don’t like killing innocent people, but in this case, it is allowed,” he read.

The brothers were caught on surveillance video carrying the shrapnel-filled bombs as runners neared the marathon’s finish line in Boston’s Back Bay and as thousands of spectators cheered on the sidewalks.

Prosecutors said the Tsarnaevs, who still had a cache of pipe bombs and another pressure-cooker bomb after the attack, were planning to flee to New York City to carry out more terror attacks.

Filed under Boston Marathon , Boston Marathon bombing , Dzhokhar Tsarnaev , Tamerlan Tsarnaev
 

TheSeedObsesser

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I can partly sympathize with him (just a tiny bit) as he was trying to make a stand for his cause and that's kind of hard to on the global stage. But you don't do that my murdering innocent people. Had he gone down the path of civil disobedience, he could have changed things and dealt justice to "his people."

We need to get the heck out of the Middle East and get some social reform going inside of our own country. Going the way we are going now, we are only going to cause more bitter killers to emerge from the shadows.
 

ducks4you

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Right now NO Muslim terrorists are afraid of begin convicted and sentenced in the U.S. Personally, I believe that life in prison would have been preferable bc he would have been shipped to a CO facility and live out his miserable life in isolation, the cruelest of punishments. The appeal process is very long, but it is also very expensive. I'd like to know who is paying for his defense. =/
 

TheSeedObsesser

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Why give him a life sentence? He'd just be taking up space and using resources. Kill him, deport him. I think that a long prison sentence would make him worse, but if there's the possibility that he can be corrected...

In my opinion, thinking about the cruelest most painful way you can punish the killer is the same mentality that the killer possessed to commit his crime. Don't let his hatred infect you.
 

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I've added him to my prayer list. While he is in jail awaiting execution he will be witnessed to by Christians. It's a given. I'm praying that his heart will be opened and he will repent. Powerful message to those like him, and another life spared from Hell.
 

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Russia Repeatedly Warned US About Muslim Boston Bomber
April 24, 2013 by Daniel Greenfield 0 Comments
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It is becoming clear that there was ample warning that there was ample warning that Tamerlan Tsarnaev was a threat and that he needed to be deported.

Russian authorities alerted the US government not once but “multiple’’ times over their concerns about Tamerlan Tsarnaev — including a second time nearly a year after he was first interviewed by FBI agents in Boston — raising new questions about whether the FBI should have focused more attention on the suspected Boston Marathon bomber, according to US senators briefed on the probe Tuesday.

The FBI has previously said it interviewed Tsarnaev in early 2011 after it was initially contacted by the Russians. After that review, the FBI has said, it determined he did not pose a threat.

In a closed briefing on Tuesday, members of the Senate Intelligence Committee learned that Russia alerted the United States about Tsarnaev in “multiple contacts’’ — including “at least once since October 2011,’’ said Richard Burr, a Republican of North Carolina, speaking with reporters afterward.

Senators said the briefing also revealed failures among federal agencies to share vital information about Tsarnaev, indicating, they said, that the US government still has not established a strong system to “connect the dots’’ about would-be terrorists residing in America more than a decade after 9/11.

You can’t connect the dots if you can’t address motive. Without Islam as the motive, there was no reason to believe that Tamerlan Tsarnaev was a threat to anyone but Russia. The FBI, under the influence of political correctness, likely chose to see him as a Chechen nationalist. But a Chechen nationalist is generally a Muslim terrorist. And Muslim terrorists don’t limit their sphere of terror to just one country.
 
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