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Boston bomber's lawyer: "There is no evening the scales"

CBS News legal analyst Rikki Klieman joins "CBS This Morning" to discuss the lawyers' strategies
Defense begins case to save Tsarnaev from execution 02:29

BOSTON -- Boston Marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev's lawyers urged a jury Monday to spare his life, portraying him as "a good kid" who was led down the path to terrorism by his increasingly fanatical older brother.

David Bruck delivered the defense's opening statement in the penalty phase of Tsarnaev's trial, saying there is no punishment Tsarnaev can get that would be equal to the suffering of the victims.

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Boston Marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, right, is pictured as defense attorney David Bruck delivers the opening statement in the penalty phase in Tsarnaev's trial, Monday, April 27, 2015, in federal court in Boston. Jane Rosenberg

"There is no evening the scales," Bruck said. "There is no point in trying to hurt him as he hurt because it can't be done."

Tsarnaev, 21, was convicted of 30 federal charges in the twin bombings that killed three spectators and wounded more than 260 other people near the marathon's finish line on April 15, 2013. He was also found guilty of killing an MIT police officer during the Tsarnaev brothers' getaway attempt.

The jury that convicted the 21-year-old former college student in the bombing is now deciding whether he should get the death penalty. A recent poll showed a majority of Bostonians are against Tsarnaev paying with his life.

Bruck urged the jury to sentence the defendant to life in prison without the possibility of ever being released.

"His legal case will be over for good, and no martyrdom, just years and years of punishment," the lawyer said. "All the while, society is protected."

Bruck focused heavily on Tsarnaev's now-dead older brother, Tamerlan, depicting him as a volatile figure who led the plot. He said Tamerlan was "consumed by jihad" and had "power" over an admiring Dzhokhar.

Prison video of Tsarnaev emerges as Boston bomber faces sentencing 02:11

Bruck said Tamerlan was loud and aggressive, got into fights, failed at everything he did and never held a steady job, while Dzhokhar was a good student in high school, was loved by his teachers there, had many friends and never got in trouble.

"He was a good kid," the lawyer said. But he said Dzhokhar started going downhill in college, when his parents divorced and returned to Russia, and he was left with Tamerlan as the de facto head of the family.

Bruck said the bombing would not have taken place if Tamerlan hadn't led the way.

Tamerlan went to Russia for six months in 2012 to join jihadi fighters and returned to the U.S. even more radicalized, Bruck said. He said Russian relatives will describe how "fanatical" he seemed during that visit.

Bruck said Dzhokhar grew up amid turmoil and instability. He was born in the former Soviet republic of Kyrgyzstan, then moved from place to place with his parents and siblings before settling in the U.S. in 2002 when he was 8, the attorney said.

Bruck showed the jury photos of the Supermax prison in Colorado, where Tsarnaev would probably serve his sentence if he were given life instead of the death penalty.

Tsarnaev's existence would be austere, with most of his time spent in solitary confinement and his communication with the outside world severely restricted, Bruck said.

Tsarnaev was a 19-year-old college student at the time of the bombing. His brother, 26, was killed days after the attack when he was shot by police and run over by Dzhokhar during a chaotic getaway attempt.

The first two witnesses called by the defense Monday described two incidents at a local mosque when Tamerlan Tsarnaev became angry and interrupted prayer services.

Loay Assaf, an imam, said that in one of those incidents, in January 2013, Tamerlan became furious when Assaf likened the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. to the Prophet Muhammad. Assaf said Tamerlan took a "fighting stance" and began pointing at him and shouting.

"He said, 'You're a hypocrite,' insulting me with this," Assaf said.

Tamerlan Tsarnaev's mother-in-law, Judith Russell, testified that Tamerlan became increasingly strident about religion and the U.S. He talked about "this country's influence and harm to Islamic countries," she said.

The prosecution made its case in the penalty phase last week, calling victims and family members to the stand to recall the attack and the pain and grief it caused in hair-raising detail.

Prosecutors painted Tsarnaev as an unrepentant killer, showing the jury a photo of him giving the finger to the security camera in his jail cell three months after his arrest.

Bruck downplayed the gesture, saying Tsarnaev was just "acting like an immature 19-year-old."

CBS News Legal Analyst Rikki Klieman said the prosecution's case has been "absolutely devastating" and to overcome it "borders on the impossible."

Prosecutors urge Boston jurors to choose death for Tsarnaev 02:19

"We have to remember that what these jurors have heard and seen are things that no human being should have to live through," Klieman told "CBS This Morning" on Monday. "It's as if the jurors have been part of the carnage, have been victims of the carnage. They, too, may be suffering from this evidence."

Klieman said Tsarnaev has indicated that he doesn't mind if he gets the death penalty.

"He's certainly in the past--looking at the writings in the boat--was looking for martyrdom, jealous, in fact, of his brother's martyrdom, dying in the cause. It has been said that life imprisonment is a far worse sentence for him and that therefore that these jurors along with the Boston Globe polls that show that there are more people in favor of life, that perhaps that is the best alternative. If you put him on the stand or he dares take the stand over your objections, he might just ask for death. The jurors could spite him and give him life," Klieman said.

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