HuffPo | Boston Marathon bombing suspects Tamerlan and Dzhokhar Tsarnaev
befriended a brain-damaged anti-U.S. government conspiracy theorist
through their mother's health care aide job years before the deadly
attack, a lawyer said Tuesday.
Attorney Jason Rosenberg, who represents the family of Donald
Larking, said Larking shared publications with the brothers and
discussed theories including that the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks and
the Newtown, Conn., elementary school shooting didn't happen or the
U.S. government was behind them.
The attorney said the Tsarnaev family had a relationship
with the Larkings that started years ago when the brothers' mother began
working as a personal care assistant for Larking's wife, a quadriplegic
since birth.
Rosenberg said Larking, who lives in West Newton, just west of
Boston, was shot in the head in 1974 in an attempted robbery while
working in a convenience store. He said Larking suffered brain damage
that led to problems with his decision-making and judgment.
Authorities say the Tsarnaev brothers orchestrated the April 15
marathon bombing, in which two pressure cookers loaded with shrapnel
exploded near the finish line, killing three people and injuring more
than 260 others. Dzhokhar Tsarnaev pleaded not guilty last month to
charges including using a weapon of mass destruction to kill. Tamerlan
Tsarnaev died after a shootout with police a few days after the bombing.
Rosenberg said Tuesday the Tsarnaev brothers got to know Larking
while substituting for their mother sometimes by helping to care for his
wife. The attorney said the brothers "helpful" and "kind" to the couple
and Larking shared his views with them as he found anti-U.S. government
websites and became angrier and irrational.
The lawyer's account first emerged in a Wall Street Journal article,
which included Tamerlan Tsarnaev's former landlady talking about
publications that had been in his Cambridge apartment.
Landlady Joanna Herlihy told The Associated Press she salvaged
publications after authorities had searched the apartment and items were
discarded. She confirmed that among them were an Alabama-based
publication that uses a Confederate flag on its website and a weekly
publication that the Southern Poverty Law Center calls anti-Semitic.
Rosenberg said Tuesday he doesn't think Larking helped the Tsarnaev
brothers, ethnic Chechens from Russia, formulate ideas but may have made
them believe others felt as they did.
"(They) were seeing someone who was Caucasian and was born in America who was saying the same things," the attorney said.
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