INTERPOL
issues global security alert in connection with Boston marathon
bombings at request of US law enforcement authorities
Public
worldwide urged to provide FBI with any relevant information
19
April, 2013
LYON,
France – INTERPOL has issued an international security alert, or
Orange Notice, detailing the features of the improvised explosive
devices used in the Boston marathon bombings to assist law
enforcement across its 190 member countries detect any similarly
configured bombs.
The
INTERPOL Orange Notice, requested by the US authorities, contains
photographs of the devices and identifying information including the
fingerprints of the two suspects, 19-year-old Dzhokar Tsarnaev,
currently being sought by authorities in the US, and his brother
Tamerlan Tsarnaev, aged 26, who died after a shoot-out with police in
Boston in the early hours of Friday.
A
public version of the Orange Notice – with confidential police
information removed – is also being made available by the world
police body.
“The
decision by the FBI and US authorities to request an INTERPOL Orange
Notice will enable police services and other law enforcement agencies
around the world to advise US law enforcement authorities whether
they've come across similarly designed devices in their own
investigations,” said INTERPOL Secretary General Ronald K. Noble.
“Equally
as important is the decision by the INTERPOL National Central Bureau
in Washington to authorize a sanitized version to be circulated to
the public, as their vigilance can be essential in alerting law
enforcement to potential threats.
“One
of INTERPOL’s core missions is to ensure that national law
enforcement authorities have the information they need to help
protect their citizens from any threats, and we will continue to
liaise closely with each of our member countries during this
investigation,” concluded the INTERPOL Chief.
According
to US law enforcement authorities, the two devices which exploded on
Monday were concealed in backpacks and placed near the finishing line
of the Boston marathon. The terrorist bomb attacks resulted in the
death of three people, including an eight-year-old boy, and injured
more than 170 others.
Issued
by the Command and Coordination Centre at INTERPOL’s General
Secretariat headquarters in Lyon, all member countries have also been
requested to circulate the Orange Notice to relevant law enforcement
agencies in their countries, and to share any information on the
suspects and modus operandi with the FBI and US law enforcement
authorities.
Members
of the public with information about the suspects or the devices used
are advised to
contact
the US Federal Bureau of Investigation
as indicated on their web page and news alerts.
Created
in 2004, the INTERPOL Orange Notice is used to warn police, public
entities and other international organizations of potential threats
related to disguised weapons, explosives and other dangerous
materials. It can also be issued by the General Secretariat for any
act or event which poses a risk to the safety and security of
citizens around the globe. To date, nearly 200 Orange Notices have
been issued.

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