Accused
Boston Marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev pleaded not guilty Wednesday to 30
counts, including use of a weapon of mass destruction to kill, in federal court
in Boston.
For the
first one, he leaned toward a microphone and said, "Not guilty," in a
Russian accent. He then said not guilty repeatedly about a half-dozen more
times.
Federal
prosecutors are weighing whether to pursue the death penalty for the
19-year-old Tsarnaev, who appeared with a cast on one arm.
Tsarnaev
smiled crookedly -- he appeared to have a jaw injury -- at his sisters in court
as he arrived.
The
proceedings lasted just seven minutes and took place in a courtroom packed with
victims of the bombing, their families, police officers, and members of the
public and the media.
Tsarnaev
looked much as he did in a photo widely circulated after his arrest, his hair
curly and unkempt. He appeared nonchalant, almost bored during the hearing. The
cast covered his left forearm, his hand and his fingers.
The April
15 attack killed three people and wounded more than 260. Authorities say
Tsarnaev orchestrated the attack along with his older brother, Tamerlan
Tsarnaev, who died following a shootout with police three days after the
bombing.
Dzhokhar
Tsarnaev was arrested on April 19 when he was found hiding in a boat in a
suburban backyard. He was initially charged in the hospital, where he was
recovering from wounds suffered in a police shootout.
Tsarnaev's
two sisters, both dressed in Muslim garb, were in court Wednesday. One was
carrying a baby, the other wiped away tears with a tissue. His parents remained
back in Russia.
Reporters
and spectators began lining up for seats in the courtroom at 7:30 a.m. as a
dozen Federal Protective Service officers and bomb-sniffing dogs surrounded the
courthouse.
Four hours
before the hearing, the defendant arrived at the courthouse in a four-vehicle
motorcade that included a van, a Humvee and a state police car.
A group of
about a dozen Tsarnaev supporters cheered as the motorcade arrived. The
demonstrators yelled, "Justice for Jahar!" as Tsarnaev is known. One
woman held a sign that said, "Free Jahar."
Lacey
Buckley, 23, said she traveled from her home in Wenatchee, Wash., to attend the
arraignment. Buckley said she has never met Tsarnaev but came because she
believes he's innocent. "I just think so many of his rights were violated.
They almost murdered an unarmed kid in a boat," she said.
A group of
friends who were on the high school wrestling team with Tsarnaev at Cambridge
Rindge and Latin waited in line outside the courtroom for hours, hoping to get
a seat.
One of
them, Hank Alvarez, said Tsarnaev was calm, peaceful and apolitical in high
school.
"Just
knowing him, it's hard for me to face the fact that he did it," said
Alvarez, 19, of Cambridge.
Another
ex-teammate, Shun Tsou, 20, of Cambridge, called Tsarnaev "a silent
warrior type."
"There
was nothing sketchy about him," said Tsou, adding that he had not formed
an opinion on Tsarnaev's guilt or innocence.
Prosecutors
say Tsarnaev, a Muslim, wrote about his motivations for the bombing on the
inside walls and beams of the boat where he was captured. He wrote the U.S.
government was "killing our innocent civilians."
"I
don't like killing innocent people," he said, but also wrote: "I
can't stand to see such evil go unpunished. ... We Muslims are one body, you
hurt one you hurt us all."
Three
people -- Martin Richard, 8; Krystle Marie Campbell, 29; and Lingzi Lu, 23 --
were killed by the bombs, which were improvised from pressure cookers.
Authorities say the Tsarnaevs also killed Massachusetts Institute of Technology
officer Sean Collier days later while they were on the run.
Numerous
bombing victims had legs amputated after the two explosions, which detonated
along the final stretch of the race a couple hours after the elite runners had
finished.
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