Posted on 05/16/2015 9:07:19 PM PDT by Second Amendment First
BOSTON - APRIL 8: Camille Lerner, 21, of Boston, painted the words 'B Strong' on the window of Sugar Heaven on Boylston Street, across from the Finish Line where the first bomb went off, after the verdict came down in the trial of Dzhokhar Tsarnaev in Boston on April 8, 2015.
No victim of the Boston Marathon bombings was more poignant, perhaps, than eight-year-old Martin Richard. It was a photo of a smiling Martin, who was from Bostons Dorchester neighborhood, holding up a handmade sign saying, No more hurting people, that seemed to underscore the callousness of the acts and the innocence of the victims. Yet even as the trial focused on the trauma suffered by the Richard familynot only was Martin killed, but his sister Jane lost her left leg and his mother and father were also severely injuredthe family itself issued a statement urging the prosecution to abandon its quest for the death penalty.
That a family so tragically and permanently affected by these terrible acts could still take such a principled stand sums up how a lot of people in Massachusetts feel about the death penalty imposed Friday on Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, the younger of the two brothers responsible for the 2013 bombings. Some might think the opposition to the sentence carries a whiff of hypocrisy with it. This deep-blue state has been long known for its opposition to capital punishment, but apparently those noble principles have been trumped by cold reality. Even liberals, it seems, will seek harsh vengeance when its their children getting killed and their streets red with blood.
In fact, though, Massachusetts and its principles have acquitted themselves quite well. The death penalty trial was imposed by the federal government against the wishes of the state. By a wide majority, the Bay States citizens opposed the ultimate punishment for Tsarnaev. So too did some of the victims. And perhaps most troubling of all, the jurys verdict will bring little measure of closure. Rather than Tsarnaev disappearing anonymously behind bars for the rest of his days, his case will be appealed and fought. Death by execution, if it ever comes, may be decades away.
The last executions in Massachusetts were in 1947. Since then, the state had become increasingly uncomfortable with the death penalty. A Boston Globe poll conducted during the Tsarnaev trial, for example, found only 30 percent of the states residents supported the death penalty. That contrasts markedly to national polls which show that despite growing reservations about its use it still has solid support.
But its clear that, soon after the bombings, the fate of Dzhokhar was quickly politicized. Some members of Congress, including Senators John McCain and Lindsay Graham, wanted to treat him as an enemy combatant. It was a dubious idea which would have meant trying him a U.S. citizen in military courts without basic constitutional protections. In response, the Department of Justice pushed to federalize the case, taking it out of the hands of the state. A key reason for that: Massachusetts law doesnt permit the death penalty. Federal law does.
Tsarnaevs trial then kicked off with a controversy. In order to sit on the jury, jurors had to be death qualified meaning they were comfortable in imposing execution. Given that only a minority of residents fit that qualification, the pool of potential jurors shrank. And, of course, the resulting jury was almost by definition more biased in favor of capital punishment than would have been a representative cross section of the state.
From there, the trial was split into two partsa guilt phase and a penalty phase. There was almost no disagreement about the facts of the case. In her opening remarks on March 4, defense attorney Judy Clarke flatly admitted Tsarnaevs culpability. Theres little that we dispute, she said. It was him. On Monday afternoon, April 15, 2013, Dzhokhar and his elder brother Tamerlan placed backpacks containing homemade bombs on two locations along Boylston Street in Bostons Back Bay. The street was packed with crowds cheering runners making their way to the finish line. The bombs detonated within 12 seconds of each other, killing three and injuring more than 260. Left dead were little Martin; Krystle Campbell, a restaurant manager from nearby Medford; and Chinese grad student Lingzi Lu. Days later, the brothers now on the run murdered MIT police office Sean Collier. Tamerlan died after an exchange of gunfire with police; Dzhokhar was eventually found hiding in a boat in residential backyard.
Nevertheless, the guilt portion of the trial proceeded for over a month, the prosecution using its witnesses to underscore the brutality of Tsarnaevs actions and the devastation he wrought.
After a two week breakduring which Bostons 119th Marathon was runthe jury met again to consider the penalty it should levy. The court of public opinion was also engaged in similar deliberations. The two came to opposite conclusions.
The same Boston Globe poll that found little support for the death penalty in general found even less when it came to Tsarnaev. Just 19 percent thought he should be put to death while almost 63 percent favored life imprisonment (the rest were unsure).
Others affected by the bombings had similar sentiments. In a Facebook post, Jennifer Lemmerman, sister to murdered MIT police officer Sean Collier, wrote, Whenever someone speaks out against the death penalty, they are challenged to imagine how they would feel if someone they love were killed. Ive been given that horrible perspective and I can say that my position has only strengthened.
Added to that were serious questions about Tsarnaevs youthhe was only 19 at the time of the attacksaffectionate stories about him from classmates and friends, and worries about the outsized influence his radicalized older brother exerted on him. Indeed, the drumbeat of opposition to the death penalty was at such a level that it seemed to put US Attorney Carmen Ortiz on the defensive, causing her to issue a statement saying she cared deeply about the views of the Richard family but also the views of the other victims and survivors. To most of those following the trial and especially because imposing the death penalty required unanimity among the 12 jurorsit seemed overwhelmingly likely the verdict would be life in prison.
But the jurors lived in a court-created bubble. They didnt see the polls and they didnt read the Richard family statement. Instead, day after day they watched Tsarnaev. Despite Sister Helen Prejeanshe of Dead Man Walking fame recounting Tsarnaev telling her, No one deserves to suffer like they did, the defendant sat stone-faced, evidencing little reaction to even the most gut-wrenching testimony. Even if Dzhokhar had been unduly influenced by his brother, jurors must have wondered, shouldnt that influence have waned after two years? Where was the remorse?
Theres public respect for the jurys efforts, but much disagreement as well. And concerns of ethics and morality aside, much of that disagreement is practical. The Richard familys argument for life imprisonment was that the death penalty could bring years of appeals and prolong reliving the most painful day of our lives. And it will.
In a few days there will be a sentencing hearing where trial judge George OToole, Jr., will make official the jurys decision. From there, Tsarnaev likely heads to Death Row in Terra Haute, Indiana. After that and as predicted by the Richards will begin the appeals. There are grounds (ranging from jury selection to trial timing to the release of inflammatory material) that will provide grist for the media for many years to come. The minute the defendant fades from our newspapers and TV screens is the minute we begin the process of rebuilding our lives and our family, the Richard family wrote. That minute is on hold.
Tom Keane is a Boston-based writer and former Boston city councilor. He can be reached at tomkeane@tomkeane.com.
....and in twenty years these same ‘thoughtful’ liberals will be the same ones demonstrating for this little scum-bags release ‘because he has now demonstrated in his writings and interviews that he no longer believes in terrorism’
Then liberal teachers will have their classes write get well letters to their long suffering political prisoner.
“It was Armed and Dangerous, is that the one you were thinking of?”
Yeah, and I really liked Meg Ryan as the handgun instructor. “This is where the bullets come out!” pointing to the muzzle.
What a load of BS. I haven't personally talked to anyone up here who opposes it. I guess I just don't hang around with the right people.
Seems like I was taught that they were burnt at the stake, but I see now that is incorrect.
I agree, but without the love.
Some on a news program yesterday said That the Boston Bomber would be sent to a Super Max facility South of Terra Haute Indiana
All but one were hanged. One was executed by stoning.
Tom Keen is an evil murderer in the television show “The Black List”
Kind of like a football coach saying, gentlemen, this is a football.
McVeigh’s execution was relatively swift because McVeigh didn’t engage in endless appeals; this Boston terrorist in contrast, will make endless appeals.
The poor MSM is on suicide watch.
The People are glad the perp is going to die,
although most want him eaten by pig today.
The question I have is Was this a federal court?
And if so, do the feds even have jurisdiction?
Since I know something about basic economics and the...glorious history of Communism/Socialism, I am a real black sheep in our Communist of Massachusetts.
Liberal Chick gets college students to sign pressure cooker ban
Yep.
And if so, do the feds even have jurisdiction?
Would you prefer Taxachusetts had jurisdiction? Because, then, the Joker wouldn't be slated to die, Massachusetts not having the death penalty.
Instead, he might marry one to four of his groupies ... e.g.,
I kinda figured that Massachusetts doesn’t have the death penalty.
Which leads us to a question: Why, if the murders happened in Massachusetts, do the feds have jurisdiction?
And I AM NOT asking because I don’t think he deserves it, but I am asking because of the powers that exist, the Tenth amendment.
Could be fed jurisdiction because of terrorism or with “use of a weapon of mass destruction”.
In 1997 the MA Legislatur almost approved the DP, but state rep. John Slattery (”Slattery will get you nowhere”, I always say) changed his vote and it went down. (Thought there was a non binding referendum question about it shortly before which did pass...)
http://www.nodp.org/ma/stacks/globe_110797.html
>>(Nov 1997) Nine days after voting 81-79 in favor of capital punishment, the chamber deadlocked after one representative, John P. Slattery of Peabody, switched
his vote out of concern that innocent people could face execution, and that the bill did not afford enough protection for juveniles and minorities.
>>Under parliamentary rules, the 80-80 vote killed the bill, which would have allowed capital punishment for 15 categories of first-degree murder. The vote preserved Massachusetts’ status as one of 12 states without the
death penalty.
Wiki (Marathon Bombings): “On April 18 at about 10:48 pm, Sean A. Collier, 27, an MIT police officer...was ambushed in his police car and died from multiple gunshot wounds from the bombing suspects.”
The Wiki entry for Dzohkar says both brothers shot Collier
>>Tsarnaev and his brother murdered MIT police officer Sean Collier on April 18 at the MIT campus
They shouldn't. But they do. Unfortunately for the Joker.
And I AM NOT asking because I dont think he deserves it, but I am asking because of the powers that exist, the Tenth amendment.
Maybe he could do something useful by appealing successfully, thereby saving his miserable Mooselimb life and preserving the Tenth.
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