Attorneys representing accused Boston Marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev on Monday asked the U.S. District Court in Boston to add death-penalty specialist David Bruck to their team, part of an effort to spare the life of their 19-year-old client.
Â
Tsarnaev, who is accused of killing four people and wounding more than 260 in the April 15 bombings and a later gun battle with police, faces the possibility of execution if convicted.
Â
The ethnic Chechen and naturalized U.S. citizen last week pleaded not guilty to all 30 counts in his first public appearance since his April 19 arrest.
Â
His lawyers, who include top Boston public defender Miriam Conrad and death-penalty expert Judith Clarke, argued in a motion filed on Monday that the sheer scale of the case - in which authorities reviewed thousands of images taken at the crowded race finish and interviewed witnesses in the United States and abroad - make the help necessary.
Â
“Counsel expect that the amount of discovery that this investigation will produce will be truly massive,†attorneys for the suspect wrote. “Even were this not a potentially capital case, the magnitude of the task confronting Mr. Tsarnaev’s attorneys would be daunting.â€
Bruck, who serves as a law professor and director of the Virginia Capital Case Clearinghouse at the Washington and Lee University School of Law, has specialized in death penalty defenses for more the three decades.
Â
His defense clients have included the men accused of hijacking a New York-bound PanAm flight from Karachi, Pakistan, in 1986 and the perpetrators of the 1998 bombing of the U.S. embassy in Nairobi, Kenya.
Â
Bruck did not immediately respond to request for comment.
Â
Tsarnaev and his 26-year-old brother, Tamerlan, are accused of placing a pair of homemade, pressure-cooker bombs at the race’s finish line, where they ripped through a crowd of thousands of onlookers and athletes in the largest mass-casualty attack on U.S. soil since 9/11.
Â
Three people died in the bombing: 29-year-old restaurant manager Krystle Campbell, graduate student Lingzi Lu, 23; and eight-year-old Martin Richard. MIT police officer Sean Collier was killed three days later, according to the indictment. [Read More]
—–
Source: VOA News: War and Conflict
Comments are closed. Please check back later.