Home Boston Tsarnaev Trial – a Lecture in Watertown

Tsarnaev Trial – a Lecture in Watertown

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by Dee McLachlan

I am more than pleased to announce that Mary W Maxwell, PhD, LLB, will give a lecture in the library about the trial of Dzhokhar Tsarnaev on January 23, 2018 at 6pm. The lecture will be livestreamed at 911TV.org starting at 6 EST (which is Wednesday at 10am Sydney time). It will also be archived later at Youtube.

The lecture is a “free community event”. The library is located at 123 Main St, Watertown, Massachusetts. Check the library’s website, watertownlib.org, for snow cancellations.

Mary is an amicus curiae in the appeals of the case, US v Tsarnaev. Her amicus brief includes the affidavit filed by Jahar’s aunt, Maret Tsarnaeva. (which was already in the Court file). Paul Craig Roberts first publicized the affidavit on August 17, 2015. This caused Mary to come flying over to Melbourne so we could make a Youtube video about it. I also ran the affidavit at GumshoeNews, but it seems to have disappeared from the archive. So I now publish it again here. I have highlighted in BOLD Maret’s more astonishing claims. Note: Maret’s counsel was Jack Graham.

AFFIDAVIT OF MARET TSARNAEVA CONCERNING THE PROSECUTION OF DZHOKHAR TSARNAEV

Mindful that this affidavit may be filed or displayed as an offer of proof with her authorization in public proceedings contemplated by the laws of the United States of America, and in reliance upon Title 28 of the United States Code, Section 1746, Maret Tsarnaeva deposes and says:

I am the paternal aunt of Dzhokhar Tsarnaev who has been prosecuted before the United States District Court for Massachusetts upon indictment of a federal grand jury returned on June 27, 2013, for causing one of two explosions on Boylston Street in Boston on April 15, 2013. In the count for conspiracy, certain other overt acts of wrongdoing are mentioned. As I understand the indictment, if Dzhokhar did not carry and detonate an improvised explosive device or pressure-cooker bomb as alleged, all thirty counts fail, although perhaps some lingering questions, about which I offer no comment here, might remain for resolution, subject to guarantees of due process of law, within the jurisdiction of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.

I am currently living in Grozny, the capital of Chechnya which is a republic within the Russian Federation. My academic training included full-time studies in a five-year program of the Law Faculty at the Kyrgyz State University, and I also hold the degree of master of laws (LL. M.), with focus on securities laws, granted by the University of Manitoba while I lived in Canada. I am qualified to practice law in Kyrgyzstan. I am fluent in Russian, Chechen, and English, and am familiar with other languages. I am prepared to testify under oath in public proceedings in the United States, if my expenses are paid, and if my personal safety and right of return to my home in Chechnya are adequately assured in advance.

Aside from other anomalies and other aspects of the case on which I make no comment here, I am aware of several photo exhibits, upon which the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) relied, or of evidence which their crime laboratory has produced, and certain other reports or material. Together, these plainly show that Dzhokhar was not carrying a large, nylon, black backpack, including a white-rectangle marking at the top, and containing a heavy pressure- cooker bomb, shortly before explosions in Boston on April 15, 2013, as claimed by the FBI and as alleged in the indictment for both explosions. On the contrary, these photo exhibits show unmistakably that Dzhokhar was carrying over his right shoulder a primarily white backpack which was light in weight, and was not bulging or sagging as would have been evident if it contained a heavy pressure-cooker bomb. The only reasonable conclusion is that Dzhokhar was not responsible for either of the explosions in question.

On or about June 20-21, 2013, during their first trip to Russia, which lasted about ten days more or less, Judy Clarke and William Fick, lawyers from the federal public defender’s office in Boston, visited my brother Anzor Tsarnaev, and his wife Zubeidat, respectively the father and mother of Dzhokhar. The meeting was at the home of Dzhokhar’s parents in Makhachka which is in the republic of Dagestan adjacent to the republic of Chechnya, and about three hours’ drive from Grozny. My mother, my sister Malkan, and I were present at this meeting. Zubeidat speaks acceptable English. Mr. Fick is fluent in Russian.

Laying aside other details of the conversation on June 20-21, 2013, I wish to note the following:

The lawyers from Boston strongly advised that Anzor and Zubeidat refrain from saying in public that Dzhokhar and his brother Tamerlan were not guilty. They warned that, if their advice were not followed, Dzhokhar’s life in custody near Boston would be more difficult;

— Mme Clarke and Mr. Fick also requested of Anzor and Zubeidat that they assist in influencing Dzhokhar to accept the legal representation of the federal public defender’s office in Boston. Mr. Fick revealed that Dzhokhar was refusing the services of the federal public defender’s office in Boston, and sending lawyers and staff away when they visited him in custody. In reaction to the suggestion of Mr. Fick, lively discussion followed;

— As Dzhokhar’s family, we expressed our concern that the federal public defender’s office in Boston was untrustworthy, and might not defend Dzhokhar properly, since they were paid by the government of the United States which was prosecuting him, as many believe for political reasons. Dzhokhar’s parents expressed willingness to engage independent counsel, since Dzhokhar did not trust his government-appointed lawyers. Mr. Fick reacted by saying that the government agents and lawyers would obstruct independent counsel;

— I proposed that Dzhokhar’s family hire independent counsel to work with the federal public defender’s office in order to assure proper and effective representation of Dzhokhar. Mr. Fick replied that, if independent counsel were hired by the family, the federal public defender’s office in Boston would withdraw;

Mr. Fick then assured Anzor and Zubeidat that the United States Department of Justice had allotted $5 million to Dzhokhar’s defense, and that the federal public defender’s office in Boston intended to defend Dzhokhar properly. Zubeidat then and there said little concerning assurances of Mr. Fick. But for my part, I never believed that the federal public defender’s office in Boston ever intended to defend Dzhokhar as promised. And my impressions from what happened during the trial lead me to believe that the federal public defender’s office in Boston did not defend Dzhokhar competently and ethically.

In any event, I am aware that, following the meeting on June 20-21, 2013, Mme Clarke and Mr. Fick continued to spend time with Anzor and Zubeidat, and eventually persuaded Zubeidat to sign a typed letter in Russian to Dzhokhar, urging him to cooperate wholeheartedly with the federal public defender’s office in Boston. I am informed by my sister Malkan, that Zubeidat gave the letter to the public defenders, shortly before their departure from Russia on or about June 29, 2013, for delivery to Dzhokhar.

During subsequent trips Mme Clarke and Mr. Fick to see Dzhokhar’s parents in Makhachkala, the strategy for defending Dzhokhar was explained, as I learned from my sister Malkan. The public defender’s office in Boston intended to contend at trial, as actually has happened since, that Tamerlan, now deceased, was the mastermind of the crime, and that Dzhokhar was merely following his big brother. I was firmly opposed to this strategy as morally and legally wrong, because Dzhokhar is not guilty, as FBI-generated evidence shows. Some ill- feeling has since developed between myself and Dzhokhar’s parents over their acquiescence.

On or about June 19, 2014, during their visit to Grozny over nearly two weeks, three staff members from the public defender’s office in Boston visited my mother and sisters in Grozny. I am told that they also visited Dzhokhar’s parents in Makhachkala.

The personnel visiting my mother and sisters in Grozny on or about June 19, 2014, included one Charlene, who introduced herself as an independent investigator, working in and with the federal public defender’s office in Boston; another by the name of Jane, a social worker who claimed to have spoken with Dzhokhar; and a third, by the name of Olga, who was a Russian- English interpreter from New Jersey. They did not leave business cards, but stayed at the main hotel in Grozny, hence I presume that their surnames can be ascertained.

I was not present at the meeting in Grozny on or about June 19, 2014, but my sister Malkan, who was present, called me by telephone immediately after the meeting concluded. She revealed to me then the details of the conversation at the meeting. Malkan and I have since spoken about the visit on several occasions.

Malkan speaks Russian and Chechen and is willing to testify under oath in public proceedings in the United States through an interpreter in Russian, if her expenses are paid, and if her personal safety and right of return to her home in Chechnya are adequately assured in advance. She relates, and has authorized me to state for her that, during the conversation on June 19, 2014, in Grozny, Charlene the independent investigator stated flatly that the federal public defender’s office in Boston knew that Dzhokhar was not guilty as charged, and that their office was under enormous pressure from law enforcement agencies and high levels of the government of the United States not to resist conviction.

This affidavit is executed outside of the United States, but the foregoing account is true to the best of my knowledge, information, and belief, and subject to the pains and penalties of perjury under the laws of the United States of America.

Given on this 17th day of April 2015.

/signed/ Maret Tsarnaeva   [all emphasis added at GumshoeNews.com]

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12 COMMENTS

  1. Readers, if you wish to attend, here’s how to do it. If you are already in Beantown, go to Harvard by subway on the red-line and look for the #71 Watertown Square bus — for example at 4.59pm. 5.08pm, or 5.17pm. It takes at least 30 minutes.
    You can use cash (two bucks) or a Charlie card on the bus. If you’ve already tapped your card on the red-line, the bus is free.
    Take #71 all the way to the end. See the CVS at 27 Main St? Walk two and a half blocks from there.

    If taking a coach or Amtrak into Boston, go downstairs at South Station and catch the outbound Alewife subway to Harvard. If taking a plane (thanks!), use the free silver-line bus from Logan Airport to South Station. Buy a Charlie card from a machine in South Station and proceed as above.
    Please look appreciatively at the Watertown Library staff as this is a MAJOR gift from them.
    Major, major, major.

  2. Amazing work–you inspire me to keep going, ploughing through the mire–power to you all- may justice prevail-may the force be with you

  3. Caiu sobre Dzhokhar Tsarnaevs e seu irmão o veredito ou seja a culpa, por eles simplismente serem estrangeiros… A mochila branca do jovem Jahar nao condiz com a mochila preta… E tem muitas evidências da inocência, onde fotos e videos foram camuflados, so em evidencias as que interessam apenas para a Elite societe e Fbi.

  4. In comments to yesterday’s Gumshoe re Skeptic, Berry gave us a link to the Bunbury bombing in WA in 1976. Here is a clip from it:

    The West Australian newspaper used very traditional news frames in reporting the events associated with the Bunbury bombing. The story broke on 14 April 1976 with details about the theft of the gelignite later used in the bombing. A little over three months later, the news about the bombing of the wood chip terminal at Bunbury led The West Australian’s news coverage.

    From then until 28 July 1976 the newspaper covered various aspects of the search for the bombers and their eventual capture by police. Coverage then turned to the court case, the jailing of the two convicted bombers and the Crown appeal against the length of their sentences (perceived to be inadequate) through late 1976 and into the first quarter of 1978. Chester’s escape from custody then became the focus of the newspaper’s coverage.

    • By 1976 there was a significant amount of outrage at the pillage of old growth forest and as Chester & Haberjoen made sure that their actions didn’t cause any physical harm to anyone they garnered considerable public support. The only means for any government to maintain control in such a situation was to replace such hippies with………..

  5. Disappeared from the archive, much else missing?
    links to utube and all cloudy things, are a problem as the content gets disappeared regularly.

  6. I’m responding here to a Berry comment on another article, where she refers o the take-over of genuine movements. Here is an ad for a book by the Small-Planet lady Frances Lappe, and a young colleague, Adam Eichen:”Daring Democracy”:

    “Americans are distraught as tightly held economic and political power drowns out their voices and values.
    [BUT] an essential truth: It’s not the magnitude of a challenge that crushes the human spirit. It’s feeling powerless—in this case, fearing that to stand up for democracy is futile. With riveting stories and little-known evidence, Lappe and Eichen demystify how we got here, exposing the well-orchestrated effort that has robbed Americans of their rightful power. But the heart of this unique book is solutions.
    In this timely and necessary book, Lappé and Eichen offer proof that courage is contagious …”

    Yay! Courage is contagious. Yay!

  7. I wouldn’t mind having a chat with Maret if that was at all possible. I am fairly certain that my original article which I sent to America prior to the trial was emailed to Dzhokhar’s lawyer, and that she contacted me but under another name, those emails I have passed onto Mary Maxwell.

    One of the primary questions I would seek an answer to is that story that when Dzhokhar was first arrested his throat was slit with a knife although the Swat team claimed that he shot himself in the throat. Mind you Dzhokhar was unarmed at the time of his arrest. The world was later told by Dr Ian Tiabb that Dzhokhar would be unable to talk because of this injury. So my question would relate to the seriousness of this injury and to the resultant ability to talk.

    Other than that I would like to pass on my sympathy to the family for all they have suffered

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