Ex-in-law: Boston bomber loved his brother, did what he was told

BOSTON -- A former brother-in-law of Boston Marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev testified Wednesday from Kazakhstan about the role of a conservative Muslim convert who steered Tsarnaev's older brother toward a stricter version of Islam.

Elmirza Khozhugov, the former husband of Tsarnaev's sister Ailina Tsarnaeva, testified on live video for the defense from the U.S. Embassy in Almaty. The Tsarnaev family lived in the Dagestan region of Russia, near Chechnya, and in the former Soviet republic of Kyrgyzstan before moving to the U.S. in 2002, when Dzhokhar was 8.

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A federal jury will soon decide whether Dzhokhar, now 21, should be executed or sentenced to life in prison for the 2013 bombings that killed three people and wounded more than 260. A recent poll showed a majority of Bostonians are against Tsarnaev paying with his life.

The defense is trying to show that Dzhokhar was heavily influenced by his radicalized 26-year-old brother, Tamerlan, whom they call the mastermind of the plot. Tamerlan was killed days after the bombing during a getaway attempt.

Khozhugov said the Muslim convert named Misha often visited the Tsarnaev apartment in Cambridge, Massachusetts, to talk to Tamerlan about Islam.

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"I wouldn't call it formally a lesson, but he was teaching him and suggesting books to read ... expressing his own views about that faith to Tamerlan," Khozhugov said.

Khozhugov said one night, father Anzor Tsarnaev came home from work and wanted to take a shower. But mother Zubeidat stopped him because he would have to walk through the kitchen, where Misha was talking with Tamerlan.

"Anzor would say, 'Why is he so late at night .... in my house?' ... She would say, 'Don't bother them, Misha is teaching your son good things,'" Khozhugov said.

He said Tamerlan told him he quit boxing, stopped taking acting classes, and stopped playing and listening to music after Misha said those things were not appropriate in Islam.

Khozhugov also described the close-knit relationship between the brothers. He said Tamerlan often couldn't find the words to express how much love he had for Dzhokhar and how he was willing to do anything to help Dzhokhar be successful in life.

Dzhokhar, in return, adored Tamerlan, Khozhugov said.

"''He listened to Tamerlan. He went along any time Tamerlan would say, 'Let's go do this and that,'" Khozhugov said. "He would just go along and always find time to actually go along."

On Tuesday, Tsarnaev's lawyers called a Russian historian and a psychiatrist to the stand in a bid to portray the convicted Boston Marathon bomber as the product of a dysfunctional family from a turbulent corner of the world.

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