Boston
Bombing Suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev Reportedly Unarmed When Arrested In
Boat, Officials Say
24
April, 2013
WASHINGTON
-- Two U.S. officials say the surviving suspect in the Boston
bombings was unarmed when police captured him hiding inside a boat in
a neighborhood back yard.
Authorities
originally said they had exchanged gunfire with Dzhokhar Tsarnaev
(joh-KHAHR' tsahr-NEYE'-ehv) for more than one hour Friday evening
before they were able to subdue him.
The
officials, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not
authorized to discuss the ongoing investigation, say investigators
recovered a 9 mm handgun believed to have been used by Tsarnaev's
brother, Tamerlan, from the site of a gun battle Thursday night,
which injured a Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority officer.
Dzhokhar was believed to have been shot before he escaped.
The
officials tell The Associated Press that no gun was found in the
boat. Boston Police Commissioner Ed Davis said earlier that shots
were fired from inside the boat.
Russia
contacted contacted US government ‘multiple’ times on concerns
about alleged Boston Marathon bomber
23
April, 2013
WASHINGTON
-- Russian authorities alerted the US government not once but
``multiple’’ times over their concerns about Tamerlan Tsarnaev --
including a second time nearly a year after he was first interviewed
by FBI agents in Boston -- raising new questions about whether the
FBI should have focused more attention on the suspected Boston
Marathon bomber, according to US senators briefed on the probe
Tuesday.
The
FBI has previously said it interviewed Tsarnaev in early 2011 after
it was initially contacted by the Russians. After that review, the
FBI has said, it determined he did not pose a threat.
In
a closed briefing on Tuesday, members of the Senate Intelligence
Committee learned that Russia alerted the United States about
Tsarnaev in ``multiple contacts’’ -- including ``at least once
since October 2011,’’ said Richard Burr, a Republican of North
Carolina, speaking with reporters afterward.
Senators
said the briefing also revealed failures among federal agencies to
share vital information about Tsarnaev, indicating, they said, that
the US government still has not established a strong system to
``connect the dots’’ about would-be terrorists residing in
America more than a decade after 9/11.
Senator
Susan Collins, a Maine Republican and member of the Senate
Intelligence Committee, praised law enforcement authorities for
quickly producing videos of the suspects and putting a halt to their
violent spree Thursday night and Friday.
“But
I’m very concerned that there still seem to be serious problems
with the sharing of information, including critical investigative
information,’’ she said after emerging from the closed-door
committee briefing. ``That is troubling to me, this many years after
the attacks on our country in 2001, that we still seem to have
stovepipes that prevent information from being shared effectively,
not only among agencies but also with the same agency in one case.”
Collins,
who was among senators receiving a briefing from Deputy FBI Director
Sean M. Joyce and officials from the National Counter-terrorism
Center and the Department of Homeland Security, did not elaborate on
details of those failures.
Members
of the House also received a briefing Tuesday and emerged with
questions.
“We
have to go back and take a good hard look at the gaps,’’ said
Debbie Wasserman-Schultz, a Florida Democrat. ``With each event that
occurs like this one, we have to go back and take a look at what
lessons we could learn and how to fill in those gaps.’’
Warnings
raised by Russia have loomed large in the investigation of how
Tsarnaev, a Kyrgyzstan national, and his younger brother, Dzhokhar, a
naturalized US citizen, allegedly prepared for the April 15 bombing
attacks near the finish line of the Boston Marathon.
``I
think the increasing signals are that these are individuals that were
radicalized, especially the older brother, over a period of time,’’
said Republican Senator Marco Rubio, of Florida, after the briefing.
He said the brothers ``used Internet sources to gain not just the
philosophical beliefs that radicalized them, but also learning
components of how to do these sorts of things.”
US
officials have faced tough questions for not tracking the older
brother’s travels to the Russian provinces of Dagestan and Chechnya
-- where he spent more than half of last year and may have interacted
with militant groups or individuals.
The
FBI has said it was not aware that Tsarnaev had traveled to Russia in
2012. Senator Lindsey Graham, Republican of South Carolina, said
Monday that the FBI told him it was not aware of the older Tsarnaev’s
travels because his name had been misspelled on an airliner passenger
list. US Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano confirmed
the misspelling during a hearing before the Senate Judiciary
Committee Tuesday, but she said Homeland Security nonetheless was
aware of his trip.
“Even
with the misspelling under our current system, there are
redundancies, and so the system did ping when he was leaving the
United States,” she said.
Napolitano
said the Senate’s proposed immigration overhaul bill would improve
that system to avoid any chance of clerical errors, by making
passports ``electronically readable.’’
Her
disclosure that Homeland Security knew of the trip, but not the FBI,
raised questions among lawmakers.
“I
want to make sure that DHS is talking to the FBI,” said Senator
Charles Grassley, the ranking Republican on the Judiciary Committee.
“It looks to me like there is a lack of communication.”
Others
expressed concern about signs that officials did not connect the dots
about the potential threat Tsarnaev’s may have posed.
“Post-911
we thought we had created a systems that would allow for the free
flow of information between agencies,” said Senator Saxby
Chambliss, a Republican from Georgia and member of the intelligence
panel. “And I think there have been some stone walls .. .that have
been re-created that were probably unintentional.”
Senator
Dianne Feinstein, who chairs the Senate Intelligence Committee,
cautioned against jumping to any final conclusions.
“We
had a full discussion back and forth over the process that’s
followed and we need to keep at that and we need to see if there are
any loopholes in it, that we fix those loopholes,” she said.
She
characterized the issues as part of an evolving intelligence process.
“With
every one of these we find problems, it’s not just this one,” she
said. “And you try to remedy the problem so next time it’s not
going to happen and something else pops up next time, but the right
things are being done and the right kind of investigation is being
conducted.”
“I
think there’s concern about knowledge about the individual’s trip
to Russia and was that information shared between the FBI and
Homeland Security,” said, Representative Michael McCaul, a Texas
Republican who chairs of the House Homeland Security committee.
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