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World|life|April 20, 2015 / 12:06 PM
Boston Bombing victim's parents say don't execute Tsarnaev

AKIPRESS.COM - 18marathon-web-master675 For the last few months, the government has used Bill and Denise Richard, and the death of their son Martin, to drive home the heinous and depraved nature of the bombings at the 2013 Boston Marathon, the U.S. media report.

Martin, who was 8, was with his family, cheering on the runners, when the menacing figure of Dzhokhar Tsarnaev entered the picture. Videos shown in court showed Mr. Tsarnaev lurking behind the family for four minutes before a bomb went off, killing Martin.

The government showcased Martin’s death in its opening statement and closing argument at Mr. Tsarnaev’s trial. Prosecutors put Bill Richard on the stand. They had the medical examiner describe in excruciating detail what the bomb did to Martin. They showed the jury the burned clothes Martin had been wearing.
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The Richard family helped Mayor Martin J. Walsh of Boston unveil a banner at the site of one of the blasts that hit the 2013 Boston Marathon, on the second anniversary of the attack.

Now, as the government prepares to make its case for why Mr. Tsarnaev should be put to death, the Richard family says it has had enough. In an open letter to the Justice Department, printed Friday on the front page of The Boston Globe, the Richards praised law enforcement and the Justice Department for “leaving no stone unturned” during the first part of the trial, but said now that it had reached the sentencing phase, they wanted the government to stop seeking the death penalty.

“We are in favor of and would support the Department of Justice in taking the death penalty off the table in exchange for the defendant spending the rest of his life in prison without any possibility of release and waiving all of his rights to appeal,” they wrote.

They argued not against the death penalty itself but against what the continued pursuit of it would mean for them — endless appeals, never letting them move on, forcing their two other children “to grow up with the lingering, painful reminder of what the defendant took from them.”

“As long as the defendant is in the spotlight, we have no choice but to live a story told on his terms, not ours,” they wrote. “The minute the defendant fades from our newspapers and TV screens is the minute we begin the process of rebuilding our lives and our family.”

The family all suffered in the explosion: Martin’s little sister, Jane, then 7, lost her left leg; his brother, Henry, then 9, witnessed unfathomable carnage; their mother, Denise, is blind in her right eye; their father, Bill, caught burning shrapnel in his legs, and his eardrums were perforated.

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