← All Cases Coverage by Bryan K. Randolph · BrynoDC

United States v. Tsarnaev

No. 20-443 SCOTUS · Decided Decided SCOTUS
Cert Granted: Mar 22, 2021 Argued: Oct 13, 2021 Decided: Mar 4, 2022

Case Overview

Dzhokhar Tsarnaev was convicted on all counts for his role in the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing and sentenced to death; the First Circuit reversed his death sentence over the trial judge's handling of juror selection and exclusion of certain evidence. The Supreme Court reversed the First Circuit 6-3 and reinstated Tsarnaev's death sentence, holding the trial judge's rulings were within proper discretion.


The Facts

In 2013, Dzhokhar Tsarnaev and his brother Tamerlan detonated pressure-cooker bombs near the Boston Marathon finish line, killing three people and injuring hundreds more. Tsarnaev was convicted on all charges and sentenced to death. The First Circuit reversed his death sentence on two grounds: the trial judge had improperly excluded evidence that Tsarnaev's co-conspirators had committed other murders, and had improperly limited juror questioning about pretrial exposure to publicity.

The Application

History

Applying the discretionary standard to a capital case with extraordinary pretrial publicity surrounding the Boston Marathon bombing, the trial judge's limitation on voir dire questions about media exposure was reasonable because the procedure still adequately tested for bias through jurors' responses about their ability to presume innocence and decide the case on evidence alone. Similarly, the exclusion of evidence that Tsarnaev's brother had committed an unrelated triple murder fell within the judge's discretion because the prior crimes' probative value to the sentencing determination was substantially outweighed by the risk of confusion and jury prejudice from introducing collateral crimes unrelated to Tsarnaev's own culpability. Even if the rulings were debatable, any error in either category was harmless given the overwhelming evidence of Tsarnaev's guilt and the nature of his aggravating conduct--planting explosives that killed and maimed dozens at a public event.

The Conclusion

**The Supreme Court reversed 6-3, holding that the district court committed no reversible error in either respect.** The trial judge's management of voir dire was reasonable and the exclusion of the co-conspirator evidence did not undermine the fairness of the sentencing phase. Tsarnaev's death sentence was reinstated.

CourtSupreme Court of the United States
Filed -
Judge -
CL StatusActive
View on CourtListener →

No circuit court data for this case.

Cert GrantedMar 22, 2021
StatusActive
Filed (CL) -
View on CourtListener →
SCOTUS TMR-b0cd6ca7 Jul 13, 2026
Subscribe on Substack ↗

This tracker is maintained by BrynoDC and is free because readers fund it. Support