In court in Boston on Monday, convicted Boston Marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev finally shed some tears during this the penalty phase of his trial.
It wasn’t from remorse for the deaths of three spectators and the maiming of hundreds of others during the most notorious event in recent Boston history. It was because of the testimony of various female relatives from Russia who described him — of course — as “a good boy,” a “very quiet boy,” who cried when he watched the death of Simba’s father in the film The Lion King. One of his aunts wept so uncontrollably that she had to be removed. Tsarnaev reached for the tissues, wiped tears from his eyes, and blew his aunt a kiss.
The Russian aunties weren’t the only females who pleaded on behalf on Tsarnaev in court. Last week a former teacher, Becki Norris, testified on Tsarnaev’s behalf to spare his life. On the same day as the aunts’ testimonies, Norris published a piece at the website of Boston’s NPR station WCUR, entitled “Why I Testified on Behalf of Dzhokhar Tsarnaev.” She wrote,
Yes, he did the unforgivable. And yes, I still love him. And — this one is hard to fathom, I know — he is a human being who still needs love.
So I testified on Dzhokhar’s behalf, during the penalty phase of his trial. I testified to help the jury see why he might be spared the death penalty.
To show what a winsome little boy her former student was, she added this picture of the young Dzhokhar holding her newborn child.
You know who else was a sweet boy, a good boy?
Little Martin Richard, who at 8 years old was the youngest of the bombing victims to lose his life. Here he is in a picture taken at school, ironically holding aloft a poster asking for peace.
Here is a picture taken outside his Catholic parish after he celebrated his First Communion.
FBI footage and pictures show that Dzhokhar Tsarnaev wantonly placed his homemade bomb near the little boy, not caring who was caught in the blast. Later Tsarnaev was seen carrying on with his life as if nothing had happened.
Here is a still of Tsarnaev, the bomb, and little Martin Richard alongside the barrier.
There is no doubt that Dzhokhar Tsarnaev is a depraved, remorseless killer who forfeited the magnificent opportunities he had as an American citizen for the sake of jihadi perversions. Justice demands that he forfeit his life in exchange for the lives he took, including that of a little Christian boy who once asked for peace on a simple school poster.
Let Satan give Dzhokhar the love he needs, IYKWIMAITTYD.
Dzohkhar was a gov patsy, anyone with half a brain would know the gov, Fbi is capable of fabricating evidence and witnesses. Yes, the Boston bombing was no hoax, and I sympathize with those who lost their lives, and were forever maimed,but Boston will not get the justice it deserves by sentencing a scapegoat to lwop or dp. Judy Clarke’s opening statement was”he did it”, yet the discrepancies to this case from the beginning only prove our gov has some kind of hold on Tsarnaev, whether it be a threat to his remaining family, or and fabricated evidence,the technology used at bmb were too complicated for the Tsarnaevs to carry out, needless to remind the public neither brothers fled the country after the bombings, and Todashev was executed by Fbi agents who forged a confession, yet were cleared of all crimes. May I remind everyone of how many officials entered their resignations after the bombings, and the Fbi agents who were involved in dzokhar’s capture suddenly “fell out of a helicopter”during training. We all know the gov is capable to rid themselves of innocent blood on their hands at any cost because they can simply get away with it.
Had he done this in his home country, he would have gotten no mercy, he should get none here either.
BTW, how did all of these aunties get here, who paid their way?
“BTW, how did all of these aunties get here, who paid their way?”
You did, Penny.
[…] of his life spared (it will be nine years next month since the Boston Marathon was bombed) than 8 year old Martin Richard, his youngest victim, had on this earth. When convicted and sentenced to death in federal court, […]
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