Call & Times

Barr: Feds to appeal, seek death for Boston bomber

- By MICHAEL BALSAMO and ALANNA DURKIN RICHER

:ASHINGTON — The -ustice 'epartment will seek to reinstate a death penalty for ']hokhar Tsarnaev, the man who was convicted of carrying out the 201 Boston Marathon bombing, Attorney General :illiam Barr said Thursday.

In an interview with The Associated 3ress, Barr said the -ustice 'epartment would appeal the court’s ruling last month that tossed Tsarnaev’s death sentence and ordered a trial to determine whether he should be executed for the attack that killed three people and wounded more than 2 0 others. Barr said the -ustice 'epartment would take the matter to the 8.S. Supreme Court.

“:e will do whatever’s necessary,´ Barr said. “:e will take it up to the Supreme Court and we will continue to pursue the death penalty.´

8nder Barr, the -ustice 'epartment has again begun carrying out federal executions, putting three men to death so far and scheduling at least three others next week and in September, despite the coronaviru­s pandemic and waning public support for the death penalty. Barr has said it is the -ustice 'epartment’s duty to carry out the sentences imposed by the courts — including the death penalty — and to deliver justice for the families of the victims.

A three-judge panel of the 1st 8.S. Circuit court found in -uly that the judge who oversaw the 201 trial did not adequately question potential jurors about what they had read or heard about the highly publici]ed case.

The 1st Circuit’s decision has ripped open old wounds in %oston, with many injured in the attack e[pressing anger and anguish at the prospect of having to relive their trauma again at a second trial.

0assachuse­tts’ 8.S. Attorney Andrew Lelling said Thursday that prosecutor­s are hoping for a favorable ruling at the nation’s highest court so they can avoid another trial. Lelling said he respects the voices of those calling on prosecutor­s to drop their pursuit of the death penalty but said Tsarnaev’s crimes “place him in that narrow category of criminals for whom death is a proportion­al punishment.”

“Some have argued that e[ecuting Tsarnaev will not deter others from pursuing similar crimes. %ut, ultimately, this decision is not about deterrence,” Lelling said in an emailed statement. “It is about justice.”

The defense acknowledg­ed that Dzhokhar Tsarnaev and his older brother, Tamerlan Tsarnaev, carried out the attack on April 15, 2013, but sought to portray his brother as the radicalize­d mastermind who they said lured his impression­able younger brother into violence.

Tamerlan Tsarnaev, 26, died following a gunfight with police and being run over by his brother as he fled. Police captured a bloodied and wounded Dzhokhar Tsarnaev hours later in the %oston suburb of Watertown, where he was hiding in a boat parked in a backyard.

Tsarnaev, now 27, was convicted of all 30 charges against him, including conspiracy and use of a weapon of mass destructio­n and the killing of an 0IT police officer during the Tsarnaev brothers’ getaway attempt. The appeals court upheld all but a few of his conviction­s.

An attorney for Tsarnaev, David Patton, declined to comment Thursday. Patton said after the 1st Circuit’s decision that “it is now up to the government to determine whether to put the victims and %oston through a second trial, or to allow closure to this terrible tragedy by permitting a sentence of life without the possibilit­y of release.”

Prosecutor­s told jurors that Tsarnaev was just as culpable in the attack they say was meant to punish the 8.S. for its wars in 0uslim countries. In the boat where he was found hiding, he wrote, “Stop killing our innocent people and we will stop.”

.illed in the bombing were Lingzi Lu, a 23-yearold %oston 8niversity graduate student from China .rystle Campbell, a 29-yearold restaurant manager from 0edford and 8-year-old 0artin 5ichard, who had gone to watch the marathon with his family. 0assachuse­tts Institute of Technology police Officer Sean Collier was shot to death in his cruiser days later.

Describing media attention in the case as “unrivaled in American legal history,” the appeals court said 8.S. District Judge *eorge O’Toole fell short in running a jury selection process “sufficient to identify prejudice.”

The 1st Circuit also found that O’Toole erred in refusing to let the defense tell jurors about evidence tying Tamerlan Tsarnaev to the killings of three people in the %oston suburb of Waltham in 2011.

“If the judge had admitted the Waltham evidence — evidence that shows like no other that Tamerlan was predispose­d to religiousl­y-inspired brutality before the bombings and before Dzhokhar’s radicaliza­tion — the defense could have more forcefully rebutted the government’s claim that the brothers had a µpartnersh­ip of eTuals,’” Judge O. 5ogeriee Thompson wrote in the ruling.

President Donald Trump tweeted after the decision that the federal government “must again seek the Death Penalty in a do-over of that chapter of the original trial.” The ruling came as the 8.S. government recently resumed federal e[ecutions following a 17-year pause.

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