







After three days of poring over photos
and video, investigators appealed to the public to help them identify two men
now considered suspects in the Boston Marathon bombings.
The men were photographed walking down Boylston
Street, one behind the other, near the finish line of Monday's race.
Suspect 1 was seen wearing a
light-colored, collarless shirt underneath a dark-colored jacket and wearing a
dark baseball cap.
The man identified as Suspect 2 was
seen setting down a backpack at the site of the second explosion "within
minutes" of the blasts that killed three people and wounded nearly 180,
said Special Agent Rick DesLauriers, the head of the FBI's Boston office. He
was wearing a light-colored hooded sweatshirt, a black jacket and a white
baseball cap turned backward.
In particular, DesLauriers asked for
help from anyone standing in front of the Forum restaurant, where the second
bombing happened.
"Somebody out there knows these
individuals as friends, neighbors, co-workers or family members of the
suspects," DesLauriers said. "And though it may be difficult, the
nation is counting on those with information to come forward and provide it to
us."
People with possible information on the
two men were urged to go to the FBI's website, https://bostonmarathontips.fbi.gov
By Thursday evening, authorities already had received a "large volume of
calls ... as a result of the photos," an FBI official said. The FBI's
website, moreover, had been inundated with record traffic.
It wasn't immediately known then
whether any of the tips had led to the suspects. DesLauriers cautioned that
anyone who think they know their identities should be careful, and consider
them armed and "extremely dangerous."
"No one should approach
them," he said. "No one should attempt to apprehend them except law
enforcement."
'They acted
differently than everyone else'
Other footage, still unreleased, shows
that the two suspects stayed at the scene to watch the carnage unfold, a
federal law enforcement official with knowledge of the investigation told CNN's
Susan Candiotti.
"When the bombs blow up, when most
people are running away and victims were lying on the ground, the two suspects
walk away pretty casually," said the official, who has seen the unreleased
video. "They acted differently than everyone else."
While video of at least one suspect
planting the bomb exists, the FBI had chosen not to release it, according to
the official. One reason, according to the official, is that were the media to
repeatedly show the suspects leaving the bomb, it might cause some people to
overreact if they came into contact with them.
DesLauriers said intelligence had been
developed on the first suspect "within the last day or so." The
official who spoke with CNN said images of the second suspect were isolated
Wednesday.
The investigation also turned toward
the possibility that the bombs had been detonated by remote control, a federal
law enforcement official briefed on the investigation said Thursday.
Investigators contacted the maker of a
battery found in the debris of the blasts, said Benjamin Mull, a vice president
at Tenergy Corporation. One of the firm's batteries, typically used in
remote-controlled hobby cars, was found in the aftermath of the attack,
connected to some wires and a piece of plastic.
In the early hours of the
investigation, a law enforcement official told CNN that the bombs were probably
detonated by timers. The FBI has said details of the detonating system were
unknown.
While the latest clues moved the
investigation forward, it is still unclear whether the attack was an act of
domestic or foreign terrorism.
Bombers 'picked the
wrong city,' Obama says
Thursday evening's FBI announcement
capped a day in which President Barack Obama brought a mixture of reassurance
and defiance to an interfaith memorial service in the city's Cathedral of the
Holy Cross. Whoever planted the bombs "picked the wrong city" to
attack, he said.
"Every one of us stands with
you," Obama told the crowd. "Boston may be your hometown -- but we
claim it, too. ... For millions of us, what happened on Monday is
personal."
Addressing the still-unknown
perpetrators, Obama added: "Yes, we will find you. And yes, you will face
justice. We will hold you accountable." And he looked ahead to next year's
race, predicting that "the world will return to this great American city
to run even harder and to cheer even louder for the 118th Boston Marathon. Bet
on it."
Among the crowd of about 2,000 were
first lady Michelle Obama; the president's Republican challenger last November,
former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney; the state's current governor, Deval
Patrick; and Boston Mayor Thomas Menino. During an interlude, attendees were
soothed by a performance by famed cellist Yo-Yo Ma.
Menino praised each of the three
bystanders who were killed in the blasts -- Martin Richard, described as a
"young boy with a big heart"; Krystle Campbell, whose spirit
"brought her to the marathon year after year"; and Lingzu Lu, who
"came to the city in search of an education."
The audience also included scores of
police officers and other first responders. Crowds erupted in cheers as the
cathedral emptied out at the end of the service, while others sang the national
anthem.
Obama also stopped at a high school to
thank a group of first responders and volunteers and met with patients recovering
from the attacks at Massachusetts General Hospital.
"It was extremely uplifting for
them," said Dr. David King, a trauma surgeon at the hospital. "I
think it's incredibly inspiring that he would take time out and visit them and
have a sincere interaction with all of these folks that have been hurt."
Obama "was humbled by the
patients' bravery and their fortitude and their drive to continue," he
added.
The first lady met with patients,
families and hospital staff at Boston Children's Hospital and Brigham and
Women's Hospital, the White House said.
The wounded: 59 still
hospitalized
Investigators say the bombs, which
exploded 12 seconds apart, were designed to deliver the most vicious suffering.
A total of 59 people remained hospitalized on Thursday, six of them in critical
condition, according to Boston-area hospitals. At least 13 people lost limbs as
a result of the bombing.
One device was housed in a pressure cooker hidden inside a backpack, the FBI said. The device also had fragments
that may have included nails, BBs and ball bearings, the agency said.
The second bomb was in a metal
container, but it was unclear whether it was in a pressure cooker as well, the
FBI said.
Photos obtained by CNN show the remains
of a pressure cooker found at the scene, along with a shredded black backpack
and what appear to be metal pellets or ball bearings. They were sent to the
FBI's national laboratory in Virginia, where technicians will try to
reconstruct the devices.
In the past, the U.S. government has
warned federal agencies that terrorists could turn pressure cookers into bombs
by packing them with explosives and shrapnel and detonating them with blasting
caps.
Family and friends, meanwhile, were
mourning the three dead:
• Richard, the
8-year-old boy with a gap-tooth grin and bright eyes. He loved to run and play
in his yard.
• Lu,
the Chinese graduate student at Boston University who had moved to the city
last fall, making friends and soaking up new experiences.
The U.S. State Department has been in
contact with her family and the Chinese Foreign Ministry, Secretary of State
John Kerry said in a statement released Thursday.
"We stand ready to provide
whatever appropriate assistance we can to the family members of foreign
nationals in the aftermath of this despicable act of terror," Kerry said.
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