How many lost limbs in boston
Even during his trial, victims disagreed about Tsarnaev's punishment. Bill and Denise Richard, Martin's parents, in a open letter published in the Boston Globe newspaper urged prosecutors not to pursue the death penalty, saying it would prompt years of appeals and "prolong reliving the most painful day of our lives. During conference calls organized by prosecutors over the years, survivors expressed views on both sides of the debate, according to Andrew Lelling, the former top federal prosecutor in Massachusetts.
Borgard, 30, said he worries that the Supreme Court, which has a conservative majority, could use this case "as a rationale for the execution of other human beings. Norden, 59, said her views favoring execution for Tsarnaev have not changed, asking: "If this doesn't warrant the death penalty, what does?
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Sign up. Jessica Kensky said that she and her husband each lost a left leg in the attack and that she eventually had to have her other leg amputated as well. I wanted to put my feet in the sand, and I wanted to do all these things. To lose the second leg was a gut-wrenching, devastating decision. Kensky testified at the federal death penalty trial of bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, whose own lawyers have acknowledged his involvement but said he was influenced by his other brother, Tamerlan, who was killed in a getaway attempt days after the bombings.
In the first two days of testimony , prosecutors called more than a dozen witnesses, including several marathon spectators who described losing limbs. About two dozen survivors, friends and family members were in the courtroom Monday. Last week, Tsarnaev showed no reaction to the vivid and powerful stories delivered just feet in front of him, but jurors and spectators in the courtroom found it painful to hear. Three people died and more than others were injured when twin bombs exploded at the finish line of the Boston Marathon.
Less than 30 minutes later, Tarnaev calmly walked into a Whole Foods store in Cambridge and bought a half-gallon of milk. The jury was shown store surveillance video of him making the purchase.
Jurors also watched a timeline video compiled by the FBI using surveillance video from stores and restaurants near the marathon finish line. The video, which shows both brothers' movements around the time of the bombings, focuses on Dzhokhar and shows him carrying a backpack up until he gets to the front of the a restaurant, when he is shown dropping the bag from his shoulder.
Many of the worst injuries suffered by Boston victims involved shrapnel-like material that was embedded in wounds. Surgeons were still working to remove these materials. In some cases, small pieces of shrapnel that did not pose an immediate threat to blood vessels and other structures would probably be left in the body.
Surgery was performed on nine of those patients, one of whom required amputation. At Massachusetts General Hospital, eight of the 34 patients treated were in very severe condition and required extensive surgery, said Dr. George Velmahos, chief of trauma surgery.
Those operations included an unspecified number of amputations, he said. Patients who have lost limbs face a long road to recovery, experts say, but not as long as the one they would have faced decades ago.
Christina Skoski, a retired anesthesiologist who lives in Huntington Beach, was 15 years old when she had her left leg surgically amputated at the hip.
She is now a member of the scientific and medical advisory committee of the Amputee Coalition, a national group that provides resources to those who have lost limbs. Generally, Skoski said, it takes a year for a patient to recover. In that time they will learn to use a prosthetic device and adapt to their new circumstances. Before that happens, however, they will go through a grieving process over their lost limb. There are about 2 million people with amputations in the United States.
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