Prosecutors want to prevent “Dead Man Walking” nun from testifying in Boston Marathon bomber trial

Prosecutors want to prevent “Dead Man Walking” nun from testifying in Boston Marathon bomber trial May 7, 2015

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Federal prosecutors want the nun who inspired the movie “Dead Man Walking” to be prevented from testifying in the case of the Boston Marathon bomber, according to court records.

At a sidebar conference with U.S. District Court Judge George O’Toole, Dzhokhar Tsarnaev’s defense team said that they may rest their case as early as today after jurors hear testimony from Sister Helen Prejean, a staunch death penalty opponent.

Susan Sarandon played Sister Helen in a 1995 movie starring Sean Penn about her relationship with a convicted rapist and killer. In real life, she became a spiritual advisor to that death row inmate, Elmo Patrick Sonnier, and was there when he was executed in an electric chair nicknamed “Gruesome Gertie.”

Prosecutors told the judge yesterday they planned to file a motion to “exclude the testimony of Sister Helen Prejean.”

Assistant United States Attorney William Weinreb also said the government wants to introduce “defiant notes” written by Tsarnaev in his hospital bed in the days after he was pulled from his hideout on a dry-docked boat in Watertown. “Your honor, two days when he lay in the bed in Beth Israel (hospital), he wrote one defiant note after another,” Weinreb said.

Aside from Prejean, defense attorneys indicated there would only be one other witness, Janet Vogelsang, a social worker who has testified in other terrorism-linked cases, including the trial of 9/11 hijacker Zacarias Moussaoui.

Today is the seventh day of the defense case in the penalty phase of the trial.

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