

People’s faces, you couldn’t tell who was alive, who was dead,” said Chiola. Martin Richard and two other people were killed.īoston Police Officer Frank Chiola testified earlier Thursday about his vain efforts to save one of the mortally wounded, 29-year-old Krystle Campbell. “I could see my bones and my flesh sticking out.”īauman, whose bloodied body was captured in a photo that became synonymous with the dark day, was one of 264 people injured in the horrific April 15, 2013, attack. “I looked down, and I saw my legs, and it was just pure carnage,” Bauman said. “Two seconds later, I saw a flash, heard three pops, and a second later, I was on the ground,” said Bauman, who was waiting for his girlfriend to cross the finish line when he was felled by the explosion from one of two homemade pressure cooker bombs. “I looked at him, and he just kind of looked down at me,” Bauman said of Tamerlan, who was later killed by cops. Martin Richard was killed in the Boston Marathon bombing. His mother, Denise, (top, left) sister Jane, 6, brother, Henry, 12, and father Bill. Martin Richard, (bottom, right), with his family. He wasn’t watching the race,” Jeff Bauman said of Tamerlan Tsarnaev, the older brother of Dzhokhar. It was blown off.”Ī man who lost both his legs in the bombing also testified Thursday - and described how he locked eyes with one of the killers moments before twin blasts tore through the crowd. “It was then that I noticed her leg and I picked her up. “She tried to get up, and she fell,” Richard told the jurors, some of whom openly wept. He described how he found his 6-year-old daughter, Jane, lying next to a mailbox.
#Boston bombing photo police dead little boy trial#
“I saw a little boy who had his body severely damaged by an explosion,” Bill Richard, the father of tragic Martin Richard, said on the second day of the federal trial of suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev. Supreme Court reinstates death penalty for Boston Marathon bomberīoston Marathon bomber received $1,400 in COVID relief fundsĪ dad who lost his 8-year-old son in the Boston terrorist attack brought jurors to tears Thursday as he recalled his dying child’s final moments.


Brother of Boston marathon bombing victim honors sibling, completes raceīoston Marathon bomber appeals death sentence - again
