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BOSTON (AP) —
    The guilt phase of Boston Marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev's trial was considered a slam dunk for prosecutors, especially after his lawyers bluntly admitted during opening statements that he participated in the deadly 2013 attack.
    But the outcome of the next phase of the trial is much more difficult to predict. The same jury must decide whether Tsarnaev, 21, should be put to death or spend the rest of his life in prison. The penalty phase begins Tuesday in U.S. District Court.
    Debate over whether Tsarnaev should get the death penalty intensified recently after the parents of Martin Richard, an 8-year-old boy who was killed in the bombings, urged federal authorities to consider taking death off the table in exchange for Tsarnaev spending the rest of his life in prison and giving up his rights to appeal.
    "We know that the government has its reasons for seeking the death penalty, but the continued pursuit of that punishment could bring years of appeals and prolong reliving the most painful day of our lives," Bill and Denise Richard said in a statement to The Boston Globe last week.
    A married couple who lost limbs in the attack also asked the U.S. Justice Department not to pursue the death penalty.
    "If there is anyone who deserves the ultimate punishment, it is the defendant. However, we must overcome the impulse for vengeance," Jessica Kensky and Patrick Downes said in a statement to the Globe Sunday.
    Kensky and Downes were newlyweds when two bombs exploded near the marathon finish line on April 15, 2013, killing three people and injuring more than 260. They each lost their left leg. Kensky endured more than a dozen surgeries before having her severely damaged right leg amputated in January.

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Associated Press
    Too-thin models, too much drinking, sexy cigarette packs: France's parliament is cracking down on all of these in a sweeping bill designed to improve public health and trim public health costs - while tackling unhealthy stereotypes along the way.
    The National Assembly, parliament's lower house, voted 311-241 on Tuesday to approve the draft law. It now goes to the Senate before a final vote back in the assembly. The Socialist-led government hopes the bill will take effect by the summer.
    Health Minister Marisol Touraine, the bill's champion, said it is "crucial to tackle the challenge of aging and the emergence of new diseases" while preserving France's generous and highly vaunted health care system.
    Here's a look at some of the key reforms:
    ANOREXIC MODELS
    In a measure that could cause ripples in France's famed fashion industry, the bill would make it a crime to use anorexic models or encourage anorexia.
    It would forbid anyone with a body mass index, or BMI, below a certain level from earning money as a model. The exact level - based on height and weight - would be defined later by decree if the bill becomes law.
    Any modeling agency or individual who pays a model with a BMI below the designated level would face up to six months in prison and 75,000 euros ($80,000) in fines if convicted.
    Some 40,000 people are estimated to have anorexia in France - 90 percent of them women, according to the Health Ministry.
    PLAIN CIGARETTE PACKS
    The government's plan includes a measure that would require manufacturers to package cigarettes in plain containers by May 2016. Packs would have the same shape, size, color and typeset. Brands would still be mentioned, but would be restricted to a small discreet place on the packaging.
    The government believes less attractive packaging would help discourage young people from starting to smoke. Around 30 percent of French people smoke - a habit linked to some 73,000 deaths a year in France, according to official statistics.
    UNDERAGE DRINKING
    People who encourage minors to drink excessively could face a year behind bars and a $16,000 (15,000 euro) fine.
    The sale to minors of products inciting people to get drunk, such as T-shirts, would be forbidden.
    Touraine, the health minister, has cautioned against the ills of binge-drinking, and has used the English-language term to describe the act of excessive imbibing over a short period of time.
    As many as 49,000 people die every year in France from the consequences of drinking alcohol, according to a 2013 study published in the European Journal of Public Health.
    Other measures, including requiring the labeling of alcohol-related risks in advertising, were scrapped during the Assembly debate, under pressure from the conservative opposition and France's influential wine lobby.
    CHILD OBESITY
    In a step that would require changes to the business model of some fast-food chains, the bill would ban free-refill soda fountains in restaurants in a move aimed at combatting obesity.
    Touraine, speaking in parliament, noted that the free-refill policy was "common in other countries, ... is spreading in our country and could be attractive to young people."
    SUN-BED BAN FOR MINORS
    Amid concerns about skin cancer, the bill would bar tanning salons from selling sun-bed services to customers under 18 years old or to engage in advertising targeting minors.
    FACILITIES FOR DRUG USERS
    The bill would allow for a six-year test period in which intravenous drug users would be given access to clean needles under medical supervision and in the presence of drug counselors.
    The conservative opposition - which controls the Senate - has criticized the measure as a "very bad signal" to French youth, saying it trivializes the use of drugs.
    Under France's legislative system, the National Assembly has final say in the passage of laws - so even if the Senate alters or rejects the bill, it could become law.

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Associated Press
    The man accused of killing a community college worker said the motorcycle he used to get away broke down along Interstate 95 and he walked 30 miles before a woman headed to Florida gave him a ride, according to a police report released Wednesday.
    The woman picked up the 20-year-old Stancil, whose face and neck are covered in dark, self-administered tattoos, was armed with a knife and carried almost $500, the report by Volusia County Beach Safety officers said.
    The driver was headed to Key West, Florida, but dropped Stancil off in Daytona Beach, where he was found sleeping on the beach Tuesday morning. When officers approached him, he pulled the knife but dropped it when an officer drew his gun. He was arrested without incident, the police report said.
    Stancil is awaiting extradition back to North Carolina, where he is accused of fatally shooting 44-year-old Ron Lane, a print shop director at Wayne Community College. Lane was gay, and authorities said they are investigating a possible hate crime. They haven't released a motive for the shooting, but Stancil was dismissed from a work study program at the print shop last month.
    An extradition hearing was scheduled for Wednesday.
    The police report said Stancil voluntarily gave police a statement, which authorities did not release.
    During his first court appearance Tuesday in Daytona Beach, Florida, Stancil indicated he killed Lane because his former supervisor molested a relative. Nothing in police records substantiated the allegations.

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