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View Full Version : Bombing suspect's friend convicted of lying to FBI



jimnyc
10-28-2014, 10:56 AM
Good, aiding a terrorist, I hope he remains behind bars until he melts into the furniture.

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BOSTON (AP) — A friend of Boston Marathon bombing suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev was convicted Tuesday of lying during the investigation into the 2013 attack.

Robel Phillipos, 21, of Cambridge, was convicted of two counts for lying about being in Tsarnaev's dorm room while two other friends removed a backpack containing fireworks and other potential evidence three days after the bombing while an intense manhunt was underway for the suspected bombers. He looked straight ahead impassively as the guilty verdicts were read.

FBI agents testified that Phillipos told them a string of lies about the night of April 18, 2013, before finally acknowledging he had been in Tsarnaev's room at the University of Massachusetts-Dartmouth with the two men who removed Tsarnaev's backpack and computer.

Phillipos' lawyers said he was a frightened 19-year-old who was intimidated by the FBI and too high on marijuana to clearly remember what he did that night. The defense called several friends who said Phillipos smoked marijuana a half-dozen times that day.

The defense also called former Massachusetts governor and 1988 Democratic presidential nominee Michael Dukakis to testify for Phillipos. Dukakis, an old family friend of Phillipos' mother, described a phone conversation he had with Phillipos five days after the bombings. Dukakis said Phillipos told him he had been questioned by the FBI for five hours, but was so confused he didn't remember what he said.

The defense also claimed that Phillipos' confession was coerced by FBI agents.

Prosecutors scoffed at Phillipos' marijuana defense, telling the jury that he was able to remember many details about April 18 and lied about his activities that night because he knew he had done something wrong.

The two friends who removed Tsarnaev's backpack were both convicted of conspiracy and obstruction of justice.

http://news.yahoo.com/jury-reaches-verdict-tsarnaev-friend-trial-141101801.html

revelarts
10-28-2014, 11:46 AM
Lying to the FBI.
:eek:
"Friend" of bombers who SAW a backpack 3 days after bombing.
:(

"Anything you say can be and will be used against you", even if you're not a suspect but a witness to evidence.

But if you're the FBI or other gov't agency you can lie all day long without consequence.

jimnyc
10-28-2014, 11:57 AM
Lying to the FBI.
:eek:
"Friend" of bombers who SAW a backpack 3 days after bombing.
:(

"Anything you say can be and will be used against you", even if you're not a suspect but a witness to evidence.

But if you're the FBI or other gov't agency you can lie all day long without consequence.

Apparently a jury of his peers saw it differently than you, and believed the prosecution. And not just a witness, but someone aiding terrorism. And if he told someone the story, and they then lied about it, I would say the same thing. Anyone involved in even the slightest coverup involving terrorism should get the highest penalty possible.