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Dzhokhar Tsarnaev Gets Death Penalty In Boston Marathon Bombing

mpicpp writes with a link to the New York Times's version of story that a Boston jury earlier today returned a verdict of death in the Boston Marathon bombing. From that report: A federal jury on Friday condemned Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, a failed college student, to death for setting off bombs at the 2013 Boston Marathon that killed three people and injured hundreds more in the worst terrorist attack on American soil since Sept. 11, 2001. The jury of seven women and five men, which last month convicted Mr. Tsarnaev, 21, of all 30 charges against him, 17 of which carry the death penalty, took more than 14 hours to reach its decision. It was the first time a federal jury had sentenced a terrorist to death in the post-Sept. 11 era, according to Kevin McNally, director of the Federal Death Penalty Resource Counsel Project, which coordinates the defense in capital punishment cases.

35 of 649 comments (clear)

  1. USA in good company... by by+(1706743) · · Score: 5, Insightful
    1. Re:USA in good company... by Adriax · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Slapping him in maximum security prison for life with no chance of parole might as well be death, but is something like 1/10th as expensive as execution.

      Plus, in death he gets to be a martyr and his story paraded around on recruitment drives. But in life he can be forgotten and quietly keel over (after a couple years of a porkrind and bacon diet).

      --
      I don't suffer from insanity, I enjoy every minute of it!
    2. Re:USA in good company... by NostalgiaForInfinity · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Yes, the US is not a civilized country, and it's not like Europe or Russia. We like it that way. Congratulations for realizing that.

    3. Re:USA in good company... by NewtonsLaw · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Not only that... but when I read stories in the media of a tyranical state executing those who they allege have committed crimes against their culture or religion I usually think ISIS and some guy with a sword, gun or flamethrower -- yet once again, this time, it is the good old US of A who plans to engage in such an act of barbarism.

      How sad it is that the USA stoops to such hypocrisy while on the one hand condemning ISIS, Al Qaeda etc, yet on the other, engaging in exactly the same acts of cruelty and disregard for human life that they do.

      ISIS and Al Qaeda kill innocent people by way of suicide bombings, executions etc. The USA kills innocent people (and call it collateral damage) by way of drone strikes on people they merely "suspect" of being "insurgents" and engage in executions of those who they find guilty of breaching their legal and moral standards.

      Those who deserve to lead do so by example -- not by saying "do as we say, not as we do". Sadly, the USA doesn't have the testicular fortitude to do so and prefers instead to preach from the bible of hypocrisy.

      Tragic.

      My sympathies to all US citizens -- your government and your judiciary is making you look bad.

      Far better to lock this guy up for the rest of his natural life so that you can retain the "moral high ground" -- whilst also ensuring that he does suffer for his crime, for a lot longer than a few minutes on a table or in a chair.

    4. Re:USA in good company... by Adriax · · Score: 4, Interesting

      "The great white devils executed him out of fear. Even with him helpless they feared him so much they killed him in his sleep."

      VS

      "They feared him so much they, uhm, tossed him in basement and forgot about him... like, uhm, birthday socks from your aunt..."

      The latter has less of a holy war recruitment kick to it.

      --
      I don't suffer from insanity, I enjoy every minute of it!
    5. Re:USA in good company... by dwywit · · Score: 3, Interesting

      He's going to die eventually, and he thinks he's going to paradise. Why not let him rot in jail for the next 99 years, i.e. no chance of parole.

      Execution just brings him to paradise that much sooner. If I understand it correctly, it's going to cost society more to proceed through the death penalty appeals process, than it will to imprison him for the rest of his life.

      He probably doesn't want to die just yet, but he would expect the welcome of a martyr in paradise. Just make him suffer in jail in a country he hates, and make sure he gets a news feed to keep the anger burning away.

      In other words, give him the chance to realise he's wasted his life, and he's not getting to paradise any sooner. Such despair is a suitable punishment.

      Besides, why are individuals punished for premeditated homicide, but it's OK for the state to do it? You're only reinforcing that it's ok to kill people (and yes, there are justifications for self-defence, whether on a personal or country-wide basis).

      --
      They sentenced me to twenty years of boredom
    6. Re:USA in good company... by TechyImmigrant · · Score: 3, Insightful

      See also: List of countries by homicide rate.

      Looks like the countries with the highest homicide rates don't have the death penalty.

      Most of Europe is in the lowest homicide rate end of that table. They don't have the death penalty in EU countries.

      Are you drunk?

      --
      I should use this sig to advertise my book ISBN-13 : 978-1501515132.
    7. Re:USA in good company... by nbauman · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I would contend that less than the death penalty here would be to de-value the lives of those he killed. Taking another's life is too serious of a crime to punish by any lesser measure.

      You might recall that we have a justice system, and that justice is generally defined by punishments meted out in proprotion to their crime. What punishment would be more just than death for one who has killed many?

      The Greek philosopher Thrasymacus told Socrates, "Justice is the interest of the strong." That's the kind of justice system we have.

      Punishments (and prosecutions in the first place), are determined by the political support that the accused gets. In our system, we avoid punishment for even the worst crimes committed by our military or cops.

      For example, consider the https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... the https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... or https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... The Nisour Square massacres and the rape and murder of Abeer Qassim Hamza al-Janabi were worse than the Boston Massacre, and yet none of those involved got the death penalty. Those responsible for the death of Dilawar didn't even serve jail terms.

      Do you also think the death penalty was appropriate for those American murderers?

      Do you now conclude that our system has devalued the lives of Iraqis and Afghanis? (I would agree.)

      Are you willing to execute Dzhokar, when people who committed equal or worse crimes aren't executed?

      I could accept the death penalty if it were applied fairly and consistently. But it's not.

    8. Re:USA in good company... by the+grace+of+R'hllor · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Not really interested in what they think.

      Which is the problem with United States foreign policy expressed in seven words, right there...

    9. Re:USA in good company... by Cederic · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I don't think there are many rational people who could draw parallels between the soft-nap that comes with lethal injection and the serial beheading happening at the hands of ISIS.

      No, the beheading is far quicker and far less painful to the executed person. It also requires the executioner to acknowledge the gravity of the act, unlike pressing a button from out of sight.

      I'd rather be beheaded than subjected to the torture-to-death approach of the US execution industry.

  2. The two things that have led me to oppose the DP by chispito · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I generally oppose the death penalty for two reasons:
    1) I've come to distrust the government in general
    2) I've been in jury deliberations twice. This was far more damaging to my faith in our justice system.

    But I'm not going to lose sleep over this one.

    --
    The Daddy casts sleep on the Baby. The Baby resists!
  3. Re:The two things that have led me to oppose the D by ganjadude · · Score: 3, Interesting

    exactly. there is nothing wrong with being skeptical of the death penalty. Everyone should be.

    However when there are clear cut cases, like this one, or timothy mcveigh in OK city. we should not hesitate.

    --
    have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
  4. I feel he should've gotten life no parole. by mmell · · Score: 5, Insightful
    To borrow a concept from a classic movie . . .

    The dead do not exist for all their lives in a six foot by ten foot box. They do not weep for lost freedom, nor yearn for sunshine and gentle wind. They do not slip gradually to the madness of long isolation. Tsarnaev should be made to know these things.

    1. Re:I feel he should've gotten life no parole. by vux984 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Tsarnaev should be made to know these things.

      Why? To inflict as much anguish, stress, despair, and pain on him as you legally can get away with? That says more about YOU than anything else.

      If he is imprisoned for life it should be simply because he is a threat to society.

    2. Re:I feel he should've gotten life no parole. by vux984 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I wasn't even going to attempt addressing the morality of the death penalty. I personally think the death penalty should be abolished because innocents are killed. I don't really object to it in principal as system of removing dangerous criminals that cannot be rehabilitated from society... but since there is no way of reliably determining those put to death are even actually GUILTY it is senseless to use it on anybody.

      But its really beside the point.

      The point of prison IS... no... scratch that... SHOULD BE to rehabilitate the prisoner, and to protect the public from prisoners who cannot be rehabilitated.

      Desiring the imprisonment to be physically or mentally cruel to the prisoners serves no legitimate purpose; only sadism.

    3. Re:I feel he should've gotten life no parole. by Opportunist · · Score: 4, Insightful

      So revenge is the motivation?

      Hey, I don't mind. I'm cool with that, as long as people are willing to call a spade a spade and not pretend it has anything to do with justice.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  5. Re:The two things that have led me to oppose the D by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Meh.

    This guy is obviously a massive douche and murderer, and there's no doubt as to his guilt, but I think killing him doesn't reflect well on us as a society. To me, killing killers always had the same logic as suspending people who ditch school. It's like-- wait, what's the message here exactly?

    Given the history of "humane" non-cruel, non-unusual tools for execution ("hanging! no wait, firing squad! no, we mean electrocution! Umm... lethal injection? Gassing?"), it strikes me as just one of the many feel-good but fucked up practices we haven't dropped yet.

  6. Re:not surprised by TWX · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The only people that are interested in making a stand against the jury's decision in this particular case would be those opposed to the death penalty in all cases, basically those that do not believe that the State should kill people.

    In this particular case, most entities that oppose the death penalty for specific reasons, like those that are concerned for the reliability of justice and the danger of executing innocent people, are extremely unlikely to have grounds for such an objection, given the dramatic and highly public events that led to his eventual apprehension combined with his written words admitting to his actions.

    I suspect that most of those who do object to the use of the death penalty for the first reason I mentioned probably wouldn't choose to stake their movement on this particular case, given the nature of what happened. Attempting to fight against it would probably cause more harm for the movement than good.

    --
    Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
  7. Re:The Death of Punishment by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The worst criminals often live the best lives.

    That is only true if they have power, and connections to the outside. Tsarnaev would have had neither. If he had been given life-without-parole, he would have spent it at ADX Florence, which has been described as "a cleaner version of hell".

    The problem I have with his death penalty, is that it is sending the message that if you hate someone, you can kill them ... which was his rationale for the bombing in the first place.

  8. Re:Scary side of US by xevioso · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I understand Europeans and others have difficulty understanding this. I'll explain:

    We generally believe that certain crimes are so horrific that the only possible punishment is death. Unlike other places, our criminal justice system is not merely based around removing the threat from society, or rehabilitating them, but also around the idea of punishment.

    Personally I find it horrific that in places like Norway someone like Brevik can be sentenced to only 21 years in prison for murdering dozens of people. This negates and ignores what he has done, and instead only focuses on rehabilitation, i.e., focusing on what this man can do in the future. The idea being that the past is past, and punishing someone won't bring back the people he killed.

    This misses the point. Justice based upon the idea of punishing someone, as a part of retributive justice or deterrence, has a long history, and while continentals may disagree, it's what we in the US choose to do. We believe, or at least our court system does, that some people DESERVE to die for their actions.

  9. Re:The two things that have led me to oppose the D by ClickOnThis · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The death penalty is not an effective deterrent against murder.

    http://www.deathpenaltyinfo.or...
    http://www.washingtonpost.com/...
    http://www.amnestyusa.org/our-...

    What deters murderers is not the penalty, but the likelihood of being caught.

    --
    If it weren't for deadlines, nothing would be late.
  10. Re:hardly surprising by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    because it is not very nice when people come into your home and kill people at random is it.

    You keep him in prison for the rest of his life with no possibility of parole.
    The State should never ever have the ability to kill its own citizens, and that obviously includes criminals.
    The trial was a farce, just like soviet-era show trials. It was about revenge not justice.

  11. Re:The two things that have led me to oppose the D by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 5, Funny

    This is slashdot - the correct question is "Does he blend?"

    --
    "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
  12. Re:I'm oddly torn by meta-monkey · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I can't condone the death penalty. In any case. There's the slightest chance you might be wrong.

    I'm a Catholic, so that certainly colors my opinion. I don't believe any man has the authority to deliberately* take the life of another.

    I just don't see the purpose of the death penalty. It is no deterrent. If you wrongfully execute someone, there is no chance for recompense. And life in a box sounds horrid; a fate worse than death. If you're an atheist, the murderer is getting off incredibly easy. If you're amongst the faithful, well, there is no escape from God's judgment, anyway.

    There's just no point. Let him sit in a box and think about what he did for the next seventy-plus years. "Tax dollars" are hardly an issue.

    * By "deliberately" I mean "with time to deliberate about it." I understand the necessity of taking a life to prevent someone from taking the lives of others. But if there's no immediate danger...

    --
    We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
  13. Re: The Death of Punishment by TWX · · Score: 4, Insightful

    And as each group kills members of the other group, they're both encouraged to continue killing in retribution. The mentality is the same for common street gangs and for nations.

    --
    Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
  14. Just say no... by qeveren · · Score: 3, Insightful

    ... to revenge-killing. Particularly state-sanctioned revenge killing.

    --
    Don't just stand there, get that other dog!
  15. Re:The two things that have led me to oppose the D by sumdumass · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Sigh.. You can bring a horse to water but you cannot make it drink. In certain environments, that can also cause or risk your own death/health.

    The problem is freedom, you cannot force it onto people and still be free. Sure it is a betrayal but lets be honest or perhaps realistic, it is only a betrayal by this guy and his brother (speed bump or whatever his name was). The rest of his family and all the others taken in as refugees, even if they are sympathetic by circumstance or familiar relation, haven't crossed that ideal of betrayal. This guy was brought in by his parents and likely not of his own choice although I doubt he rejected the idea. So lets be conscious about this enough to not allow corruption of blood.

    And no, while a .22 will do the job just fine, I think it is important to give this guy every legal chance possible to dispel the concept of it being a show trial and summery execution. People have already stated they think he was set up. But a good and thorough appeals process along with exhaustive exercising of his rights will show not only that justice is fair, but that what he betrayed is better than him.

  16. Re:hardly surprising by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    How dare you! He is a member of the religion of peace!

    The Tsarnaev exemplifies how FUCKED UP the American government has become

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/04/29/tsarnaev-trial-tamerlan-testimony_n_7173250.html

    The Russian intelligence agency, - the FSB, - had given the American government the dossier of the Tsarnaevs, prior to the Boston Marathon bombing

    Along with the dossier, which includes an interview with a distant cousin living in Dagestan, another region in Russian, who said that Tamerlan had visited and sought an introduction to Islamic fighters, the Russian FSB had warned the Americans that the Tsarnaev are ticking time bombs

    But what the American government did? Nothing!

    That's right, not . a . mother - fucking . thing

    According to the FBI, which is being led by a bunch of moslem loving liberals, "the FBI investigated Tamerlan in 2011 for terrorist connections, but found he had none"

    Yep, the FBI "FOUND NO CONNECTION" even after the Russians had given them the dossier and the interview --- and what we got after that?

    THE . BOSTON . MARATHON . BOMBING

    That is how fucked up the government of the United States of America has become --- and we should thank the Liberals for such a _marvelous_ performance !

  17. Re:hardly surprising by Runaway1956 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    AC hasn't exactly justified Tsarnaev - he has given food for thought. He last sentence, "Just something to think about." He makes it pretty clear that if we weren't such arrogant bastards ourselves, then we may have had more sympathy from the world at large when the terrorists hit us. And, there is some suggestion that if we were less overbearing overseas, then just MAYBE the terrorists wouldn't have hit us.

    Food for thought, assuredly.

    Is he right? Is he wrong? I can't say for sure. But he does offer food for thought.

    Yeah, I'm aware that Muslim terrorists are waging war on three continents already, against people who ARE NOT arrogant, overbearing bastards with military bases located around the world. Maybe the terrorists would have hit the Twin Towers anyway, and maybe the Tsarnaev brothers would have bombed the Boston Marathon anyway. I can't say for sure.

    Think about it though.

    --
    "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
  18. Re:The two things that have led me to oppose the D by ClickOnThis · · Score: 4, Insightful

    That's how I feel about it - some people simply do not deserve to live with the rest of humanity. There should never, ever be a chance that some people should ever have the possibility of afflicting more atrocities on society. I can can understand arguments about when it's perhaps not clear the perpetrator was guilty (and, of course, it sadly has happened before)... but of course, that didn't happen in this case.

    People think it's all about punishment, but it's also about keeping those who'd violate your rights away from you.

    I think all of your concerns can be addressed equally with execution or incarceration. So, why not chose incarceration? It's cheaper, it maintains a morally superior position for the justice system, and it can be reversed in the event a conviction is wrongful.

    --
    If it weren't for deadlines, nothing would be late.
  19. Re:Scary side of US by AthanasiusKircher · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I understand Europeans and others have difficulty understanding this. I'll explain:

    To be clear: polls show that about 1/3 of Americans don't buy your logic. So while you may speak for many in the U.S., there is a substantial minority that disagrees.

    We generally believe that certain crimes are so horrific that the only possible punishment is death. Unlike other places, our criminal justice system is not merely based around removing the threat from society, or rehabilitating them, but also around the idea of punishment.

    Funny, that. The U.S. justice system has a long history of claiming that lex talionis is no longer our operating principle. That's why we have departments of "corrections" where we supposedly "rehabilitate" people. But you implicitly are claiming that's all rhetoric -- that when it comes down to it, we're just after revenge.

    After all, what other justification is there for punishment when it is not intended to rehabilitate?

    This misses the point. Justice based upon the idea of punishing someone, as a part of retributive justice or deterrence, has a long history, and while continentals may disagree, it's what we in the US choose to do. We believe, or at least our court system does, that some people DESERVE to die for their actions.

    I'm in the U.S. I used to be at least a nominal supporter of the death penalty. I remember having long debates with friends when I was younger, and I made similar arguments to what you do. I also came up with other tangential justifications, which often appear here on Slashdot, like "it'd be worse if I were kept in prison for life, so I'd rather die in those circumstances -- therefore we should kill them" or whatever.

    But as I've grown older, I've realized that arguments in favor of the death penalty inevitably boil down to FOUR main justifications:

    (1) I'm mad at that guy. That's essentially what you're endorsing -- somebody did something bad, so I'm mad and I'm gonna kill him.

    (2) I'm afraid of that guy. This is the argument that some people are so evil and cannot be rehabilitated, so they should be "put down" for the good of society. That might be valid reasoning if there weren't an alternative -- but we have maximum security prisons now. We don't need to kill this person to protect us.

    (3) I want to scare other people. This has nothing to do with the actual justice served on an individual, but rather the idea that the death penalty actually deters other criminals from committing murder. There are some studies that suggest the death penalty may have a minor effect as a deterrent; there are others that refute that claim and say there is no statistical effect. One this is clear: Murderers are deterred by fear that they will be caught and go to prison, but a distant possibility of a death penalty is less of a deterrent. Perhaps if we reinstituted public executions where we tortured people in Times Square before killing them in some horrific way, maybe it might deter somebody... but the death penalty is applied so rarely and randomly that it can't function as a realistic deterrent.

    (4) We've always done it this way. That's basically your other argument: there's a long history of revenge killing by the state, so why not continue to do it? it's the same wacky logic that propagates all sorts of ridiculous and stupid traditions and keeps our society from getting better. "I'm gonna haze these young dudes, because I was hazed." "When I was first starting out, I had to work 60 hours each week on little pay, so why shouldn't I do the same to these stupid kids." Etc. Sometimes to improve society, it makes sense to interrogate our traditions and ask whether they're actually doing good things, or whether it might be better for everyone if we found another way

  20. Re:hardly surprising by nbauman · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Just to make sure I understand you here:

    It is OK for Dzhokar to target a crowd of spectators because the U.S. military kills more people than it should with drone strikes?

    There are similarities between Dzhokar killing civilian spectators and the U.S. military killing civilian spectators at a wedding.

    The main difference is that the U.S. military will say, "We only intended to kill bad guys. We didn't intend to kill civilians."

    This is subject to a just war analysis. A war is justified when the aggressor has tried every other reasonable approach, when the goal is justified, and the aggressor tries to minimize damages. I'm not convinced this is true for the drone attacks.

    I'm not absolutely against the death penalty. I could accept it under 3 conditions: (1) The defendant must actually be guilty (2) The defendant must have had a fair trial (3) Other defendants who committed similar crimes must have gotten the same penalty.

    I would compare the Boston Marathon killings to the Nusoor Square killings, where Blackwater private security contractors killed 17 people. My interpretation of the evidence is that the killings were unjustified and indiscriminate, and part of a pattern of such killings by Blackwater. One Blackwater contractor was sentenced to life in prison, and 3 others were sentenced to 30 years.

    Dzhokar's death sentence fails my third condition. If we didn't sentence any of the Blackwater contractors to death, then we can't sentence Dzhokar to death.

  21. Re:The two things that have led me to oppose the D by s.petry · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The problem with the death penalty is that there is no way to repair damage to people who were not guilty of the crime they were executed for. This happens way more often than anyone likes to admit.

    With this case, do you want me to believe that rehabilitation is not possible? I say bullshit, especially when the person convicted was a minor at the time this happened with an adult influencing his behavior. Rehabilitation is possible until proven otherwise, and it was not attempted here.

    Unfortunately, people in the US have been duped into thinking that the only purposes of a sentence are punishment and retribution.

    --

    -The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.

  22. Re: The Death of Punishment by Zontar+The+Mindless · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "An eye for an eye makes the whole world blind." --attributed to M. Gandhi.

    --
    Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
  23. Re:hardly surprising by rwa2 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The link is that the conservatives blame everything bad that happens on liberal ideology when there's a Democrat in the White House, and the liberals blame everything on the conservative ideology when a Republican is in the White House, irregardless of what the rest of the government is actually doing.

    Conservatives are stereotypically the party that wants to take the direct approach to solving problems, and prefer to spend tax money on helping winners: military, business, churches, prisons, etc.

    Liberals are stereotypically the party that wants progressive solutions to problems, and prefer to spend tax money on helping losers: through education, labor unions, health care, environmentalism, community centers, etc.

    So they both want essentially the same things... peace, prosperity, they just go about it different ways. Liberals would like to eliminate poverty by helping poor people become less poor; conservatives would prefer to eliminate poverty by eliminating poor people.

    Because of things like this, conservatives view liberals as weak, and liberals view conservatives as afraid. And they like to point that out whenever they can.