FBI interview reports were used in Dzhokhar Tsarnaev’s trial instead of
witness testimony. Tsarnaev has been sentenced to death. Photo credit: FBI.GOV
The Federal Bureau of Intimidation?
The presiding judge in the
case against convicted marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev warned jurors
last week against automatically assuming the reliability of FBI
interview reports.
US District Court Judge George O’Toole’s
admonition inadvertently bolstered long-standing criticisms of FBI
interview practices—that the FBI creates its own “truth” by refusing to
electronically record interviews, and then forcing witnesses to go along
with it using threats of jail time under the federal “making false
statements” statute.
His warning came after he took the unusual
step of allowing Tsarnaev’s defense team to read aloud FBI witness
interviews, known as “302 reports,” from two of older brother Tamerlan’s
friends. The defense team, as part of their “mitigating factors”
strategy, read selected excerpts of the reports in order to show that
Tamerlan was “radicalized” long before Dzhokhar was. Much of the
partially redacted 302 reports were not read in court.
READ MORE:http://whowhatwhy.org/2015/05/20/tsarnaev-case-judge-fbi-interview-reports-are-unreliable-and-cast-in-stone/
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