Boston bombing trial witnesses say blast was like 'a horror movie'
Warning: This story contains graphic content
Warning: This story contains graphic content.
Two years after the Boston Marathon bombing, the horror of that day is fresh in the minds of the witnesses testifying at the trial of Dzhokhar Tsarnaev.
For many, much of the coverage immediately after the bombing — which killed three people and injured 260 — focused on the manhunt for Tsarnaev and his brother, Tamerlan.
But this trial is heavily focused on the aftermath of the blast and the human cost.
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During a break in the first week of testimony, I took a quick look at my laptop so I could highlight phrases uttered in court that I’d tapped out on the fly.
Here are some of them:
“Designed to tear people apart.”
“Kill as many…as possible.”
“Shredding their flesh.”
As we sat there, with reporters in the main courtroom and in two overflow rooms with closed-circuit TVs, it all seemed full-on surreal.
Even though we all knew well what had happened, we’d now have it spelled out in bloody detail by those who lived through the attacks.
Witnesses teared up as it all poured out. No one held back.
Some likened the scene on Boylston Street on April 15, 2013, to a war zone. Or, as one woman put it, “I felt like I was starring in a horror movie” and those walking nearby were “like zombies."
She said someone shouted at her to get up and get out, but “I didn’t have a leg,” she said. “I couldn’t get up.”
“It was the most excruciating pain that one could ever anticipate,” she said.
Gasps in the courtroom
Lawyers put images on screen that had never been seen publicly before: Smartphone video with close-ups on pools of the brightest red blood you can imagine amid smoke and sirens and shouts from off camera such as “Whose leg is that?” and “There’s no way she’s going to keep that foot.”
Sidewalk security video captured the moment the second blast went off. The camera was directly behind where the bomb had been set. When it played out, there were gasps in the courtroom.
Typically, each witness would be asked to identify themselves or family members from photos taken just before and just after the bombings.
William Richard, whose eight-year-old son Martin died in the blasts, did that several times with photos of his family. In the "before" shots, William pointed to himself, his wife, Denise, his sons Henry and Martin and then to his daughter.
“And that’s Jane with two legs,” he’d say each time.
In the "after" photos, it’d be simply, “And that’s Jane.”
Richard later testified he had to leave Martin on the sidewalk with his wife so he could rush Jane (who now has only one leg) to the hospital. Richard said the air smelled “vile” and he knew Martin was dying.
The bomb, said prosecutors, “tore large chunks of flesh out of [the little boy’s] body.”
“Did you say anything to Martin before you left?” Richard was asked.
“No.”
A police officer testified how she cradled Lingzi Lu, the Chinese student fatally wounded that day. She said Lingzi had vomited and there was debris in her hair and “blood, flesh, bone” everywhere.