Politics & Government
BREAKING: Tsarnaev Found Guilty of Marathon Bombing on All Counts
The trial next goes to the death penalty phase.

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After 11 hours of deliberation, the jury found Boston marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev guilty of helping to orchestrate and carry out the blasts that killed three people and wounded another 260 people on April 15, 2013.
The verdict means that the case now goes to the death penalty phase.
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Tsarnaev is guilty on counts 1-30, which is all counts.
The penalty phase is likely to start Monday.
Tsarnaev and his brother, Tamerlan, placed the explosives that killed three people and injured more than 260 people on Patriots’ Day 2013.
The trial, which started on March 4 after a lengthy jury selection process, included defense attorney Judy Clarke admitting to the jury that her client was responsible for the Boston Marathon bombings. The decision was integral in the Tsarnaev team’s aim to save him from the death penalty.
>>>Click here to read a Patch recap of the trial
Here is a look back at the trial.
Beginning of March
- Survivors of the attack, such as Heather Abbott and Marc Fucarile, sat quietly in court during the proceedings on opening day. Abbott and Fucarile both lost a leg in the bombing. The parents of Martin Richard, an 8-year-old who was killed in one of the blasts, were also present in the courtroom. Jurors saw videos of the traumatic scene of the bombs going off at the Boston Marathon finish line and the chaotic aftermath of the blasts.
- Assistant U.S. Attorney William Weinreb said Tsarnaev “believed the United States government is the enemy of Muslim people.”
- Rebekah Gregory, who lost a leg in the bombings, testified against Tsarnaev and released a letter she wrote to him, calling him a coward.
An excerpt from Gregory’s letter:
You did take a part of me. Congratulations you now have a leg up-literally. But in so many ways, you saved my life. Because now, I am so much more appreciative of every new day I am given.
- Graphic photos of the three bombing victims who were killed at the finish line were shown to jurors, as was the murder of MIT’s Officer Sean Collier in Watertown, who was shot by the Tsarnaev brothers in the days after the bombings.
Middle of March
- Jurors saw a compilation of video surveillance images that showed the Tsarnaev brothers maneuvering through Boylston Street before, during and after the blasts.
- The note written by Dzhokhar Tsarnaev while he was hiding from police on a Watertown boat days after the attack was shown in court.
- Jurors watched surveillance video of what prosecutors say is the Tsarnaev brothers approaching Collier’s cruiser before he was shot to death. Two bloodied white gloves found inside Tamerlan’s car matched Collier’s DNA profile.
- Surveillance footage of Dun Meng escaping the bombers was shown to jurors. Meng, victim of a carjacking by the Tsarnaev pair, testified that Tamerlan had jumped into his car, pointed a gun at his head and told him to drive. Meng said Dzhokhar took his bank card and demanded his PIN number before withdrawing $800 from a Watertown ATM.
>>>Watch the Dun Meng surveillance footage here
Late-March
- Prosecutors rested their case on March 30 after jurors, many weeping, saw the ripped clothing of Martin Richard the day of the bombing.
- The defense rested its case on Tuesday, March 31.
More Boston Marathon trial coverage on Patch:
- Recapping the Boston Marathon Bombing Trial
- Boston Marathon Trial: Death of Little Boy Recounted in Chilling Detail
- Watch: Gripping Video of Carjacked Victim’s Escape from Boston Marathon Bombers
- Shades of Infamous Child Killer Case Hang Over Tsarnaev Trial
- Boston Marathon Bomber Trial Begins, Defense Attorney: ‘It Was Him’
- Alleged Boston Marathon Bomber’s Widow Could Face Criminal Charges
- Boston Marathon Bombing Suspect’s Lawyers Seek Indictment Dismissal
- Tsarnaev Lawyers: Delay Trial Over Paris Attacks
- Death Penalty Complicates Boston Bomber Trial
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