By Paul Craig Roberts
July 20, 2018 "Information
Clearing House"
- As I reported at the time, and as all
evidence indicates, the alleged Boston Marathon
Bombing was a publicly announced drill in which
crisis actors were used. There were no real
deaths or injuries, and the Tsarnaev brothers
did not set off a bomb.
The drill was turned into a real event by
propagandists who used the propaganda to advance
their agenda of police state regulation and to
test US reaction to the use of martial law to
close down the city of Boston and the airport
and to use 10,000 armed troops to invade without
warrants and search citizens’ homes under the
guise that a dangerous 19-year old “terrorist,”
who was already shot up by soldiers or police,
was on the loose. The insouciant American
public, the law schools, bar associations, US
Congress and media accepted this extraordinary
violation of the US Constitution based on the
most flimsy of all possible stories, thus
opening Pandora’s Box of police state measures
by the US government.
The faked terrorist event required
terrorists, and the Tsarnaev brothers were
selected for that patsy role. The older brother
was murdered by police. The younger brother,
having unexpectedly survived police attempts to
shoot him to death, was put on trial. His
attorneys were appointed by the government, and
the attorneys, rather than the prosecutor,
convicted their assigned client.
All of this was accepted by the public, but
not by John Remington Graham, an attorney of
wide experience. He saw that exculpatory
evidence proving the innocence of the surviving
younger brother, Dzhokhar, was ignored and later
kept out of the trial. Mr. Graham took action
that succeeded in the First Circuit accepting
into the record the exculpatory evidence,
thereby requiring that the evidence be
considered in the appeal of Dzhokhar’s kangaroo
court death sentence.
Attentive people abroad have noticed the
increasing corruption and collapse of justice in
America. On July 4, the Danish publication,
Radians & Inches, published John Remington
Graham’s account of the prosecution of Dzhokhar
Tsarnaev. With permission, it is reproduced
below. Documents relating to the case will be
posted seperately.
RADIANS & INCHES, VOL. 1, NO. 2
Published in Denmark on July 4, 2018
THE PROSECUTION OF DZHOKHAR TSARNAEV IN THE
BOSTON BOMBING CASE
Over fifty years of practicing law, largely
in criminal justice and forensic science and
medicine, I have had reason to distrust the
FBI. When I was a young lawyer, I defended
hundreds of young men who refused to be drafted
into the armies of the United States in Vietnam.
I used an argument against the
constitutionality of such conscription which had
been successfully used by Hartford Convention in
New England in bringing the War of 1812 to an
end. For those interested in details, I refer
my readers to United States v. Crocker,
420 F. 2d 307 (8 Cir. 1970), and Kneedler v.
Lane, 45 Pa. St. 238 at 240-272 (1863). All
of my clients were eventually acquitted or
pardoned. Yet in those days, while I was
teaching at an accredited law school, my
Congressman called me from Washington, D. C., to
warn me that the FBI had a dossier on me. The
FBI considered me a probable criminal because I
defended my generation successfully, according
to strict standards of law. A little over
twenty-five years ago, I was suspended from the
practice of law for sixty days, because an FBI
investigation memorandum put words in the mouth
of a key witness who later gave a live
deposition, completely clearing me of any
suspicion of wrongdoing. When the deposition
was published by a veteran journalist, the
people of my county put my name on the ballot by
citizens’ petition, and elected me as their
general counsel and chief public prosecutor. I
can provide details from the public record on
request. It came to me as no surprise,
therefore, when I learned that, in the Boston
marathon case, Dzhokhar Tsarnaev could not have
detonated a pressure cooker bomb on Boylston
Street in Boston on April 15, 2013, for which he
was indicted, convicted, and sentenced to death,
and that the FBI’s own evidence, of which
counsel on both sides and the major news media
of the United States were fully aware,
conclusively proves that the accused was not
guilty. The trial in Boston was a giant hoax, a
show trial produced by the FBI and major media
in a flagrant abuse of the First Amendment, and
most Americans are still not aware of the
critical facts. Probably tens of millions have
read the internet-accessible report by Dr. Paul
Craig Roberts, a former assistant secretary of
the treasury of the United States, about the
prosecution of Mr. Tsarnaev, drawing heavily
from the judicial record, and published widely
in the United States, Canada, Europe, and Russia
on and after August 17, 2015. I shall attempt
here to retell and update that story again here,
by attaching several of the most important
documents accessible to anybody with a Pacer
account, so my readers may review them for
themselves.
During the trial, after I had looked into the
case, I wrote an opinion, stating that, in light
of known FBI-gathered evidence, there was no
probable cause to charge Dzhokhar. Drawing from
fragments at the scene of the explosions, the
FBI crime lab and the indictment against Mr.
Tsarnaev, and also the major news media, stated
that the culprits were carrying black backpacks,
filled with heavy pressure cooker bombs, at the
time of the explosions, yet Dzhokhar in
particular who was charged, not to mention his
deceased brother Tamerlan, was shown in a
still-frame photo from a street surveillance
video used by the FBI to identify the suspects,
carrying a light-weight white or silvery bag
over his right shoulder only minutes before the
explosions. It so happens that there were widely
published photos at the time, these still
available, showing men in paramilitary gear,
wearing black backpacks which perfectly matched
the black backpacks projected by the FBI crime
lab, but these individuals were not questioned
by the FBI.
The backpacks did not match, which in itself
proves that Mr. Tsarnaev was not guilty as
charged in the indictment. In an ordinary
criminal investigation, Dzhokhar would have been
eliminated as a suspect, and the men in
paramilitary gear would have been approached and
questioned, but the FBI let them all go. Shortly
before I released my opinion, Dr. Lorraine Day,
who had for twenty-five years been chief trauma
surgeon at the general hospital in San
Francisco, came forward with an
internet-accessible opinion, in which she
unmistakably pointed out that, in news photos of
the scene, no blood was visible when it would
have been visible if there had been actual
explosions, severing limbs as claimed, and that,
when the pretense of blood did appear, the color
was a bright orange-red Hollywood color, not the
sober maroon color of human blood in real-life
situations.
Not long afterwards, I was introduced to
Maret Tsarnaeva, a Russian aunt of Dzhokhar, a
lawyer who had served as a public prosecutor in
the Kyrgyz Republic which had at one time been
part of the Russian Empire and the Soviet Union.
Maret and I spoke by skype and corresponded by
internet and regular mail. The court-appointed
lawyers for Dzhokhar had pressured Dzhokhar’s
family to accept a defense that Dzhokhar was
merely following the lead of his elder brother
in the commission of the crime on marathon
Monday. They had overwhelming proof that
Dzhokhar was not guilty, but would not defend
him with the powerful exculpatory evidence they
possessed, and thereby save his life. As things
finally turned out, the chief counsel for the
accused, appointed and paid by the United
States, appeared at trial, admitted the guilt of
her client in her opening statement, did not use
the decisive evidence of innocence in her hands,
and did not even ask for a verdict of not guilty
in her final summation. Maret knew that
Dzhokhar was not guilty as charged, and wanted
him defended on the merits. She later submitted
an affidavit to the federal district court in
Boston, executed on April 17, 2015, and sent
from the Russian Federation, in support of her
effort to appear as a friend of the court for
Dzhokhar, wherein she explained the
circumstances. Students of this prosecution
will be interested in the details revealed by
Mme Tsarnaeva, and so I attach of copy of her
affidavit which stands uncontroverted on the
judicial record. Maret decided to make an
appearance as a friend of the court to present
available exculpatory evidence in behalf of her
nephew Dzhokhar. I should note here that I had
to seek the assistance of local lawyers in
Massachusetts to move my admission to the bar of
the federal district court in Boston on special
occasion so I could represent Maret in her
amicus petition. The help of countless lawyers,
including the American Civil Liberties Union,
was solicited and refused, because the major
news media had created such a forbidding
atmosphere that local counsel were afraid of
loss of reputation or livelihood if they were
known to have assisted anybody seeking to help
Mr. Tsarnaev. I had practiced in Massachusetts
before, and had never before encountered such
difficulty. Boston was the last place in the
world where a fair trial of Mr. Tsarnaev could
be held. On advice of the bar liaison officer
of the federal district court in Boston, Maret
represented herself in her amicus petition, with
me at her side as “of counsel” so the court
would know she had legal guidance. At her
request, I prepared Maret’s motion and argument,
and filed the documents for her. Her submission
was left unanswered, and so the particulars were
admitted. For those who want the facts from the
judicial record, I attach her argument which
lays down the law and the facts, including four
exhibits at the end (designated Tsarnaeva
exhibits 1, 2, 3, and 4) which prove
conclusively that the projections of the FBI
crime lab and paragraph 7 of the indictment
(especially Tsarnaeva exhibit 3) are
contradicted by a third still-frame photo from
the Whiskey Steak House video (Tsarnaeva exhibit
4), and that, therefore, Dzhokhar was not
guilty. This evidence, though offered and not
contradicted, was ignored, and no hearing was
held upon it. The trial jury was never made
aware of this evidence, which was also hidden
from the general public. On June 24, 2015,
Dzhokhar was sentenced to death. The
proceedings were legal theater, a game of smoke
and mirrors. But at least we secured a legal
record made by the Russian aunt seeking to
appear as friend of the court, including the
argument and exhibits she offered. On motion,
these items were made a visible part of the
court record by the presiding judge.
I have heard from citizens exasperated that I
have not believed the confessions attributed to
Mr. Tsarnaev. One fellow insisted I was not a
lawyer, because I would not accept those
confessions, but he learned from the Minnesota
Supreme Court that I am a lawyer in good
standing, and have been in practice for a half
century. Why should nobody believe the
confessions in the boat and at sentencing?
Because, as Sir William Blackstone said, and as
all good criminal lawyers know, “[E]ven in cases
of felony at common law, [confessions] are the
weakest and most suspicious of all testimony,
ever liable to be obtained by artifice, false
hopes, promises of favour, or menaces, seldom
remembered accurately, or reported with due
precision, and incapable in their nature of
being disproved by other negative evidence.” — 4
Commentaries at 357. The alleged
confession in the boat in Watertown required a
special writing instrument, which Dzhokhar did
not have in his possession. At sentencing the
words of the prisoner were plainly scripted for
him: no Americanized youth, as Dzhokhar was,
says his lawyers were “lovely companions,” or
speaks of “Mohamed, peace be unto him,” etc. In
any event, confessions must always in law be
corroborated with the so-called corpus delicti:
here the confessions cannot be true, because, if
they were true, Dzhokhar would have carried a
black backpack as projected by the FBI crime lab
and charged the indictment, yet Dzhokhar carried
a white bag over his right shoulder. If there
had been real explosions, as Dr. Day said, there
would have been blood, of which there was none
when it should have appeared, and, when blood
appeared, it would not have been a flashy
orange-red in color. False confessions are
common in criminal practice, which is why the
law has for years been absorbed in using Miranda
warnings and other ways to prevent false
confessions. False confessions are a problem,
especially for prosecutors, because if an
innocent suspect is convicted, the guilty party
remains at large, and public safety is
imperiled.
A new team of court-appointed lawyers for Mr.
Tzarnaev took an appeal in his behalf to the
First Circuit. “Counsel for the appellant” will
submit their arguments, but I daresay we shall
hear nothing from them about the backpacks that
do not match, and nothing about the phony blood,
which completely change the case from guilty to
not guilty, and warrant at least a new trial, if
not an acquittal as a matter of law.
Something had to be done for Dzhokhar by
somebody other than his court-appointed counsel
who had thus far done nothing for him. And that
is why three distinguished Americans have
appeared before the First Circuit as friends of
the court. I attach a copy of their amicus
motion without appendices and addendum. The
motion refers to the record in the federal
district court in Boston, including the
exculpatory evidence and exhibits, and was filed
on October 13, 2017. If the First Circuit had
wanted to continue the cover up the exculpatory
evidence proving actual innocence, including
proof that the backpacks do not match, the First
Circuit could easily have denied the motion,
because, never before in American jurisprudence,
as far as I am aware, has a private amicus
motion ever been allowed in a major public
prosecution. If the motion had been denied,
nobody would have noticed. But, on November
9, 2017, the First Circuit granted the amicus
motion of the three distinguished American
friends of the court, including a retired
professor of philosophy, an international
scholar in political science, and a doctor of
medicine with thirty-seven years of practice
behind him. The appellate court will consider
the decisive exculpatory evidence which had been
kept from the attention of the trial jury and
the attention of the general public, previously
buried in the record as if not part of the
judicial process.
On November 24, 2017, argument in support of the
amicus motion was filed as ordered by the First
Circuit. I attach a copy of the text of
the argument before the First Circuit, without
caption, tables, appendices, or addendum. The
motion and our argument are now visibly part of
the judicial record, although the major media
have continued to abuse the First Amendment by
hiding this material from public attention in
their game of intentional deception. We have
learned of this sad reality from an honest
journalist associated with the Boston Herald,
who interviewed me for about forty-five minutes
on November 26, 2017, after she discovered our
filings with the First Circuit two days
beforehand. As she expressed her impression in
conversation with me, this material completely
changes the story of the Boston marathon case as
reported by major news media of the United
States, and she was glad to have discovered the
facts and to report them, as a good journalist
should have been. But her supervising editor
blocked publication of the story. She should
have won the Pulitzer prize and seen her work
published. If the country does not find out
what really happened in this case, Mr. Tsarnaev
will die by lethal injection, and the United
States will be disgraced in the eyes of history.
And those responsible will be answerable to
God. I have intervened, because I am an
American lawyer, and I want to be proud of the
law and proud of my country.
The lawyers on both sides of this prosecution
did not want the court to know of the decisive
exculpatory evidence in the federal district
court in Boston, but the First Circuit has
reached out and demanded it. Let us hope that
the First Circuit will tell the country the
truth, even though the major news and
entertainment media of the United State have
thus far failed us and let us all down. I
recall and remind others of the famous Pentagon
Papers case, New York Times v. United States,
403 U. S. 713 (1971), which recognized the duty
of the press to prevent deception of the people
by their government. In this case, however, it
is clear from contemporary history that the New
York Times, the Washington Post, CNN, and
associated major media have shamelessly aided
the government of the United States in hiding
exculpatory evidence in the prosecution of a man
whom they knew or should have known was not
guilty of a heinous crime, and they were guilty
of this breach of moral duty in order to mislead
the American people. –
John Remington Graham of the Minnesota Bar
(#3664X), jrgraham@novicomfusion.com,
418-888-5049.