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		 High 
		security for Boston Marathon as bombing trial pauses 
		
		 
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		[April 20, 2015] 
		By Scott Malone 
		  
		 BOSTON (Reuters) - Tens of thousands of 
		runners, including some of the world's best, and hundreds of thousands 
		of fans are expected to hit the streets of Boston on Monday for the 
		119th running of the Boston Marathon. 
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			 Security will be high along the 26.2 mile course, in recognition 
			of the bombing of the 2013 race, which killed three people and 
			injured 264 in the one of the most visible attacks on U.S. soil 
			since Sept. 11, 2001. 
			 
			The race goes on during a pause in the trial of Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, 
			the 21-year-old ethnic Chechen who was convicted earlier this month 
			of the bombing. His trial will move into a second phase beginning on 
			Tuesday, with prosecutors arguing that he should be sentenced to 
			death for his crimes. 
			 
			Police urged spectators not to bring large bags or coolers, saying 
			that such packages would be subject to search. They also banned the 
			use of drones along the course. 
			  
			  
			 
			"We have significant resources and personnel out there to protect 
			our public," said Mayor Martin Walsh. "It won't change our 
			atmosphere. The city will be the same positive environment that 
			people are used to enjoying during the Boston Marathon." 
			 
			The field will include Meb Keflezighi of San Diego, who in 2014 
			became the first U.S. male to win the race in three decades, with a 
			time of 2 hours, 8 minutes and 37 seconds, as well as top Kenya and 
			Ethiopian contenders including Patrick Makau, Abel Kirui and Wilson 
			Chebet. 
			 
			The women's race will be wide open with three-time winner and 
			reigning champion Rita Jeptoo of Kenya excluded from the race this 
			year while she serves a two-year ban from the sport after failing a 
			drug test. 
			 
			
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			Top women's contenders include Buzunesh Deba of Ethiopia, 2012 
			Boston winner Sharon Cherop of Kenya, as well as Shalane Flanagan, 
			who originally hails from the Boston suburb of Marblehead, 
			Massachusetts, who finished fourth in 2013. 
			 
			In addition to attracting elite runners competing for the $830,500 
			in prize money, the world's oldest annual marathon is a mecca for 
			dedicated amateurs who work for years to meet the strict, age-graded 
			time cutoffs they must pass to earn a coveted spot in the field. 
			 
			One group that will not be present at the race is the 12 jurors and 
			six alternates in the Tsarnaev trial. U.S. District Judge George 
			O'Toole ordered them to stay away from the race. 
			 
			(Reporting by Scott Malone; editing by Andrew Hay) 
			
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