BOSTON (MyFoxBoston.com) -- The blood-stained, shredded New England Patriots T-shirt 8-year-old Martin Richard wore at the Finish Line of the Boston Marathon was displayed in open court Monday in the trial of his accused killer and admitted Boston Marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev.
Chief Massachusetts Medical Examiner Dr. Henry Nields was the last Government witness in the first phase of this case. He detailed the horrific bomb blast injuries suffered by Martin Richard.
On Marathon Monday 2013, Martin and his family were were standing outside Forum restaurant when the second bomb exploded.
Surveillance pictures taken that day show Dzhokhar Tsarnaev in his infamous white hat, right behind the Richard family.
Dr. Nields performed the autopsy on Martin, and he told the jury about huge injuries to Martin's torso and extremities.
The doctor said some of the child's internal organs were outside his body as he lay on the ground after the blast.
Members of the jury wept, as they looked at autopsy photos and while Dr. Nields told them debris from the bomb partially severed the boy's spine, and damaged his liver, a kidney and his pancreas.
Martin Richard also suffered third degree burns.
In all, Nields says there wasn't a part of Martin Richard's body that wasn't injured.
Another medical examiner, Dr. Katherine Lindstrom testified earlier in the day about the murder of Lingzi Liu.
Lingzi was standing in front of Forum, and behind the backpack when it exploded.
Medical examiner Lindstrom said Lingzi did not immediately die, but likely experienced extraordinary pain.
Lindstrom said her body was filled with metal, pellets and nails, and the blast left Lingzi with gaping injuries in her legs, causing her to bleed to death on the sidewalk.
The government also revealed a never-before-seen photo of another angle of Dzhokhar Tsarnaev and the Richard family. Tsarnaev is seen standing behind the tree, seemingly directly behind the Richard family, and other young onlookers, who appear to have no idea he is standing there.
Before beginning its case, the defense filed a motion asking the judge to acquit Tsarnaev on all counts, claiming the prosecution failed to provide sufficient evidence of each charge.
The defense has made it clear that its strategy during the two-phase trial is not to win an acquittal but to save him from the death penalty.