Boston Marathon bomber death penalty jury not properly questioned,
lawyer argues
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[December 13, 2019]
By Tim McLaughlin
BOSTON (Reuters) - Boston Marathon bomber
Dzhokhar Tsarnaev's lawyer on Thursday asked a federal appeals court to
overturn his death sentence, saying prospective jurors were not
thoroughly questioned, violating a 51-year-old standard for weeding out
bias.
Important questions about what prospective jurors saw and heard from
newspapers, television and social media were not posed, defense lawyer
Daniel Habib argued before a three-judge appellate panel in Boston's
federal courthouse.
Tsarnaev and his older brother Tamerlan sparked five days of panic in
Boston on April 15, 2013, when they detonated two homemade pressure
cooker bombs at the marathon's finish line, killing three people and
injuring more than 200. The pair tried to flee the city four days later,
prompting a day-long lockdown of Boston and its near suburbs as police
battled the brothers and conducted a house-to-house search for Dzhokhar.
The intense emotion and news coverage's effect on potential jurors led
much of Thursday's hearing to focus on the standard for questioning
prospective jurors known as the "Patriarca rule."
Judge William Kayatta, one of the three 1st U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals judges hearing the case, said the woman who became the jury's
foreperson should have been questioned about her Twitter post calling
Tsarnaev "a piece of garbage."
William Glaser, a lawyer for the U.S. Department of Justice, said the
woman was seated on the jury nearly two years after her Twitter post.
Still, Kayatta said it was "puzzling" the defense was not allowed to ask
detailed questions about the woman's tweet.
At one point during two hours of oral arguments, Kayatta told Glaser
that the government's case has a "Patriarca problem."
"Yes, we do," Glaser responded.
The Patriarca rule requires that judges investigate the content of
pretrial publicity that may have affected prospective jurors, to discern
whether a prospective juror can be impartial.
TRAUMATIZED CITY
Defense attorney Habib said the bombings traumatized the city, which
then actively participated in the manhunt for Tsarnaev and celebrated
his eventual capture, which Habib described as a collective catharsis.
"This case should not have been tried in Boston," he said. "This
community atmosphere filtered to the actual jury."
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A pedestrian walks past death penalty protesters before the formal
sentencing of convicted Boston Marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev at
the federal courthouse in Boston, Massachusetts June 24, 2015.
REUTERS/Dominick Reuter/File Photo
He noted that Tsarnaev's defenders had asked the court to move the
trial out of Boston to avoid intense emotions that prompted one man
to tell a friend on social media that sitting in the courtroom with
the suspect during jury selection was "legit crazy."
That man also received coaching via a Facebook comment advising him
to "play the part so (you) get on the jury, then send him to jail
where he will be taken care of," Habib recounted.
Before the jury was seated, the defense team told U.S. District
Judge George O'Toole about the bias, but he did nothing, Habib said,
calling it "constitutionally intolerable."
The man who engaged in the Facebook exchanges was on the jury that
unanimously voted for Tsarnaev to receive the death penalty.
Kayatta suggested it was a missed opportunity, saying, "social media
is a powerful tool in assessing bias."
Tsarnaev, now 26, was sentenced to death in 2015 after a jury found
him guilty of killing three people in the bombing - Martin Richard,
8; Chinese exchange student Lingzi Lu, 26, and restaurant manager
Krystle Campbell, 29 - and murdering Massachusetts Institute of
Technology police officer Sean Collier, 26, three days later as the
brothers attempted to flee.
U.S. Justice Department lawyers say Tsarnaev received a fair trial
and the jury was picked from a population mostly opposed to the
death penalty. During his trial, a poll by the Boston Globe showed
that about two-thirds of Massachusetts residents favored a life
sentence for Tsarnaev.
During the trial, the family of the youngest victim, Richard, also
asked prosecutors to consider taking the death penalty off the
table.
(Reporting By Tim McLaughlin; Editing by Scott Malone, Jonathan
Oatis and Daniel Wallis)
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