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Nine years following the Boston Marathon bombing, which killed three people and injured 264 in 2013, the United States Supreme Court on Friday reinstated the death penalty for one of the two perpetrators of the attack, Dzhokhar Tsarnaev. In 2015, he was sentenced to death, but the sentence was overturned in 2020 by an appeals court which cited two irregularities. Donald Trump, then president, had asked his government to seize the Supreme Court.
The Supreme Court of the United States reinstated, on Friday March 4, the death penalty for one of the two perpetrators of the deadly Boston Marathon bombing in 2013, which left three dead and 264 injured.
The sentence of Djokhar Tsarnaev, a student of Chechen origin who had committed this attack with his brother, had been invalidated on appeal for procedural questions, related to the composition of the jury and the exclusion of elements during the trial.
The high court overturned that decision with a majority of six out of nine justices, all conservatives.
“Dzhokhar Tsarnaev has committed heinous crimes. The Sixth Amendment to the Constitution guarantees him a fair trial by an impartial jury and he got it,” she wrote in her judgment.
In 2013, then aged 19, he and his older brother, Tamerlan, planted two roadside bombs near the finish line of the Boston Marathon, causing carnage.
Identified by surveillance cameras, the two brothers had fled, killing a policeman during their run. The eldest had been shot during a confrontation with the police.
Djokhar Tsarnaev was found injured, hidden in a boat. He had written on a wall that he wanted to avenge the Muslims killed in Iraq and Afghanistan.
In 2015, he was sentenced to death but the sentence was overturned in 2020 by an appeals court which cited two irregularities.
Even if this decision made it possible to keep Djokhar Tsarnev in prison for life, it had been strongly criticized by Donald Trump, who was then president. Fervent supporter of the death penalty, he had asked his government to seize the Supreme Court.
Once in the White House, Joe Biden might have withdrawn that request, but he let it take its course. During his campaign, the Democrat had nevertheless promised to work to abolish the death penalty at the federal level.
With AFP