Surely there is no greater or more weighty decision a person could face.
Could you sentence a 21-year-old to death? 12 ordinary Americans just did.
This is the question that 12 ordinary people randomly selected to form the jury charged with deciding whether Dzhokhar Tsarnaev would live or die asked themselves over two days of delicate deliberation.
Their verdict? Execution.
And it is a decision that will likely haunt these ordinary members of the community for the rest of their lives.
Last month, the now 21-year-old Boston Marathon bomber was found guilty of 30 offences, 17 of which carry the death penalty. Tsarnaev was just a teenager when he and his brother planted the two bombs that killed three people and injured hundreds. And now he will pay the ultimate price for his crimes.
When the jury looked at the baby-faced killer – a young man who bizarrely became a pin up for deluded teenage girls all over the world – they might have been reminded of their younger brother, their cousin, their son. It’s a face you want to forgive; there’s a youth and innocence that just doesn’t seem to gel with the horrible crimes Tsarneav has been convicted of.
But when the jury looked into the body of the courtroom, they also saw Tsarnaeav’s surviving victims. Some carry permanent physical scars of the attack on April 15, 2013. Some carry less visible but equally painful emotional or psychological scarring.