Accused
Boston Marathon bomber suspect pleads not guilty
Alleged Boston Marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev pleaded not guilty Wednesday afternoon to 30 charges relating to his supposed involvement in April’s deadly terrorist attack that claimed four lives.
RT,
10
July, 2013
Tsarnaev,
19, entered his plea during his first public appearance in court
Wednesday. More than half of the charges lobbed against him
potentially imply the death penalty.
WCVB
News in Boston reported that Tsarnaev entered the court at 3:30 p.m.
Wednesday dressed in an orange prison suit. David Frank of the
Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly reported that the defendant had his left
hand in a cast but otherwise appeared healthy.
“Tsarnaev
is not showing any signs of injuries. His family is crying,” added
WCVB’s Sean Kelly.
According
to Kelly, the prosecution intends on calling upwards of 100 witnesses
to stand trial and expects the proceedings to go as long as four
months. His next court appearance, a status conference, is scheduled
for September 23.
Wednesday’s
hearing lasted less than ten minutes and was attended by family
members of the victims of the bombing as well as Tsarnaev’s family
and supporters.
Tsarnaev’s
first public appearance in a courtroom comes two weeks after a
Massachusetts federal grand jury returned a 30-count indictment
against him. The charges include using weapons of massive
destruction, killing three Boston Marathon spectators, and also
shooting a police officer to death.
The
first public court hearing are for the judge to explain Tsarnaev what
penalties exactly he may face. Seventeen of the 30 charges brought
against him are capital offences.
Sparing
Tsarnaev this worst scenario is believed to be the biggest challenge
faced by his attorney, public defender Miriam Conrad.
The
death penalty was banned in Massachusetts in 1984, but only for state
cases, while Tsarnaev is being charged under federal law, which means
he could still face capital punishment if found guilty.
Dzhokhar
Tsarnaev, an ethnic Chechen and a US citizen, is accused of setting
off homemade pressure-cooker bombs on April 15 in the middle of the
crowd watching the Boston Marathon, killing three people and injuring
more than 260, with many of the injured eventually losing their legs.
Dzhokhar was allegedly acting together with his elder brother
Tamerlan, 26, who supposedly masterminded the attack.
Later,
while being on the run from police, the brothers allegedly shot dead
an MIT police officer.
After
several days of manhunt, Dzhokhar Tsarnaev was detained, following a
gun battle with police, in which Tamerlan was killed. The younger
brother, severely wounded was found in a boat in the suburb of
Watertown, Massachusetts.
The
alleged bomber reportedly scribbled his statement on the inside wall
of the boat.
"The
US government is killing our innocent civilians," it read, as
cited by prosecutors. "We Muslims are one body, you hurt one you
hurt us all. Now I don't like killing innocent people it is forbidden
in Islam but due to said it is allowed. Stop killing our innocent
people and we will stop."
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