Sentinel & Enterprise

Feds seek High Court ruling on Tsarnaev case

- By Alanna Durkin Richer

» The U.S. Justice Department asked the nation’s highest court Tuesday to review the case of Boston Marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, whose death sentence was thrown out over concerns with the jury selection process.

In a petition, Justice Department lawyers called Tsarnaev’s case “one of the most important terrorism prosecutio­ns in our nation’s history” and said the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals was wrong when it ruled Tsarnaev deserves a new trial to decide whether he should be executed.

“Given the profound stakes...the First Circuit should not have the last word,” Acting Solicitor General Jeffrey Wall and other lawyers told the U.S. Supreme Court. The high court should “put this landmark case back on track toward its just conclusion,” they wrote.

Prosecutor­s are asking the court to hear and decide the case this term, which ends in June, “to avoid further delay in this long-running and critically important prosecutio­n.” The Supreme Court hears only a fraction of the cases it’s asked to review every year.

If the justices refuse to hear the case, prosecutor­s could go forward with another trial or drop their pursuit for capital punishment and agree to life in prison. Attorney General William Barr told The Associated Press in August that they planned to take the case to the high court and “continue to pursue the death penalty.” “We will do whatever’s necessary,” Barr said. Tsarnaev’s lawyers acknowledg­ed at the beginning of his trial that he and his older brother, Tamerlan Tsarnaev, set off the two bombs at the marathon finish line, killing three people and wounding more than 260 others. But they argued that Dzhokar Tsarnaev is less culpable than his brother, who they said was the mastermind behind the attack.

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 Boston 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 a Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology police officer during the Tsarnaev brothers’ getaway attempt. The appeals court upheld all but a few of his conviction­s.

A three-judge panel of the 1st Circuit that ordered a new penalty-phase trial for Tsarnaev said the judge who oversaw the 2015 trial did not adequately question potential jurors about what they had read.

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