Jury selection is scheduled to begin Jan 5. Tsarnaev, 21, has pleaded not guilty to 30 charges and if convicted could face the death penalty.
In a court filing yesterday, prosecutors rejected complaints by defense attorneys about their ability to digest the enormous volume of material provided by the government as the trial approaches.
Prosecutors said much of that information was demanded by the defense and voluntarily turned over by the government "in the spirit of openness."
Tsarnaev's lawyers argued in their motion filed on Tuesday that a September trial date would be more realistic given the "extraordinary complexity and international dimensions" of the case.
Two bombs at the finish line of the April 15, 2013 Boston Marathon killed three people and injured more than 260 others. Tsarnaev's older brother, Tamerlan, died in a police shootout days after the bombing.
The court filing submitted by US Attorney Carmen Ortiz also dismissed concerns raised by the defense about the scope of witness and exhibit lists filed under seal last week. The lists named more than 700 potential law enforcement and civilian witnesses and 1,238 exhibits.
The government also said it has made "a good-faith effort to identify each item on its exhibit list in an understandable manner and stood ready to help the defense identify any item on the list that they could not identify on their own," the filing said.
Prosecutors did concede that they inadvertently failed to email the defense an index of additional materials it provided Dec. 15-18, but noted it did so as soon as the defense asked for the index.
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