As the Department of Justice filed a brief in the U.S. Supreme Court seek­ing rein­state­ment of the death sen­tence imposed on Dzhokhar Tsarnaev in the Boston Marathon bomb­ing, the White House press office issued a state­ment stress­ing the inde­pen­dence of the Department over the cas­es it is pur­su­ing and assert­ing that President Joe Biden has not backed away from his cam­paign promise to work to end the fed­er­al death penalty. 

On June 14, 2021, Department of Justice lawyers filed the government’s ini­tial mer­its brief in the Supreme Court ask­ing the court to reverse a 2020 fed­er­al appeals court deci­sion that had over­turned Tsarnaev’s death sen­tence. In a plead­ing that incor­po­rat­ed lan­guage near­ly ver­ba­tim from briefs pre­vi­ous­ly filed by the Trump Department of Justice, fed­er­al pros­e­cu­tors wrote that the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit had improp­er­ly vacat­ed the cap­i­tal sen­tences rec­om­mend­ed by the jury in one of the most impor­tant ter­ror­ism pros­e­cu­tions in our Nation’s his­to­ry” and that undo­ing the appeals court’s deci­sion would put this case back on track toward a just conclusion.”

One day lat­er, a White House spokesman dis­as­so­ci­at­ed the President from the pros­e­cu­tors’ actions, cit­ing the Justice Department’s inde­pen­dence regard­ing such deci­sions.” In a email to reporters on June 15, Deputy White House Press Secretary Andrew Bates wrote, President Biden has made clear that he has deep con­cerns about whether cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment is con­sis­tent with the val­ues that are fun­da­men­tal to our sense of jus­tice and fair­ness. … The President believes the Department should return to its pri­or prac­tice, and not car­ry out executions.”

The DOJ brief pro­voked a range of dis­con­so­nant respons­es. A num­ber of lib­er­al pub­li­ca­tions inter­pret­ed the fil­ing as rep­re­sent­ing the offi­cial pol­i­cy of the Biden admin­is­tra­tion and a retreat from the President’s cam­paign promise. Biden broke his promise and failed his first death penal­ty test in a very big way,” Professor Austin Sarat wrote in a Slate com­men­tary. HuffPost report­ed: The new DOJ fil­ing to the Supreme Court under­mines what Biden has pub­licly said about end­ing the death penal­ty.” Fox News on the oth­er hand viewed the fil­ing and White House response as sug­gest­ing inter­nal dis­cord, describ­ing the press office’s state­ment as the lat­est in a recent string of instances where the White House has point­ed to the DOJ’s inde­pen­dence while open­ly criticizing them.”

Death Penalty Information Center direc­tor Robert Dunham described the incon­gruity between the DOJ action and the White House response as ful­fill­ing one cam­paign promise — to restore the integri­ty and inde­pen­dence of the Justice Department — while fail­ing to take action on anoth­er. There’s less to this than meets the eye,” Dunham told The Intercept. During his con­fir­ma­tion hear­ings, Attorney General Merrick Garland indi­cat­ed that if the White House set a pol­i­cy on the death penal­ty, the Department of Justice would fol­low it. What is the administration’s pol­i­cy with respect to the fed­er­al death penal­ty?” Dunham asked. The admin­is­tra­tion has not answered that yet.”

As a result, the DOJ con­tin­ues to respond to death penal­ty pros­e­cu­tions on a case-by-case basis. It has appeared in a fed­er­al appeals court to defend the death sen­tence imposed on Charlestown church shoot­er Dylann Roof and asked the U.S. Supreme Court to reverse the appeals court deci­sion in Tsarnaev’s case. But it also has asked a fed­er­al appeals court to return an impor­tant habeas cor­pus case to the DOJ so the Department can recon­sid­er Trump admin­is­tra­tion rule­mak­ing that would sharply cur­tail Arizona death-row pris­on­ers’ access to fed­er­al review of their con­vic­tions and death sen­tences and has rescind­ed death-penal­ty autho­riza­tion in a half-dozen cas­es in which the Trump admin­is­tra­tion was pur­su­ing capital punishment.

Simply not car­ry­ing out exe­cu­tions does not ful­fill the cam­paign promise to end the fed­er­al death penal­ty, Dunham said. It sets the table for the next pres­i­dent to car­ry out more exe­cu­tions.” Part of end­ing the death penal­ty, vet­er­an cap­i­tal defense lawyer David Bruck told HuffPost in January, would be to direct the Justice Department to stop seek­ing and defend­ing death sen­tences in fed­er­al cas­es. Another essen­tial part, death penal­ty oppo­nents say, is to com­mute the sen­tences of every­one of the fed­er­al death row.

He can do that today, he can do that tomor­row,” Dunham said. But the longer that he does noth­ing about it, … the more his cam­paign promis­es look like empty words.” 

Citation Guide
Sources

John Kruzel, DOJ asks Supreme Court to revive Boston Marathon bomber death sen­tence, The Hill, June 14, 2021; Jordan S. Rubin, Boston Marathon Bomber Death Sentence Unites Trump, Biden, Bloomberg Law, June 15, 2021; Ronn Bltzer, White House keeps pub­licly dis­agree­ing with DOJ deci­sions while stress­ing their inde­pen­dence, Fox News, June 15, 2021; Sebastian Murdock, DOJ Asks Supreme Court To Reinstate Death Penalty For Boston Bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, HuffPost, June 15, 2021; Austin Sarat, Joe Biden’s Craven Death Penalty Reversal in the Boston Bomber Case, Slate, June 15, 2021; Akela Lacy, ABSENT BIDEN POLICY, JUSTICE DEPARTMENT PURSUES DEATH PENALTY IN BOSTON BOMBING CASE, The Intercept, June 162021.

Read the U.S. Department of Justice’s ini­tial mer­its brief in United States v. Tsarnaev.