FBI
says man shot dead while being questioned about Boston bombings
An
FBI agent shot and killed a man of Chechen origin who turned violent
while being questioned on Wednesday about his connection to Tamerlan
Tsarnaev, one of two Chechen brothers suspected of carrying out the
Boston Marathon bombings.
22
May, 2013
A
friend of the dead man identified him to local media as 27-year-old
Ibragim Todashev, who had previously lived in Boston and knew
Tsarnaev, the older of the two brothers suspected of planting two
bombs at the marathon on April 15, killing three people and injuring
264 others.
NBC
News reported on Wednesday that Todashev had confessed to his
involvement in an unsolved 2011 triple homicide in a Boston suburb
that investigators believe was drug related.
Authorities
were investigating possible connections between Tsarnaev, who died in
a shootout with police, and the 2011 incident.
Three
men including a close friend of Tsarnaev were found stabbed in the
neck in an apartment on September 12, 2011, in Waltham,
Massachusetts. News reports said marijuana was strewn over their
bodies.
Wednesday's
incident took place at an apartment complex near the Universal
Studios theme park, where the FBI and members of other law
enforcement agencies including the Massachusetts State Police were
interviewing the man about the marathon bombing.
"A
violent confrontation was initiated by the individual," the FBI
said. A special agent, it said, "acting on the imminent threat
posed by the individual, responded with deadly force. The individual
was killed and the special agent was transported to the hospital with
non-life-threatening injuries."
The
possibility that Tsarnaev was connected to the Waltham murders is
"being looked at seriously," said Republican Representative
Peter King, chairman of the counter-terrorism and intelligence
subcommittee of the House Homeland Security Committee. Other U.S.
officials confirmed the investigation did involve Tsarnaev's possible
role.
A
source said, however, that while Tsarnaev's connection to the Waltham
killings was actively under investigation, at this point there was no
evidence to suggest the murders were linked to the Tsarnaev brothers'
possible motives or actions in allegedly carrying out the marathon
bombings.
A
spokeswoman for the office of the District Attorney of Middlesex
County, Massachusetts, where the murders occurred, said her office
had been conducting an open and active homicide investigation in the
case since 2011, and that local and state police investigators were
involved. She declined to comment on possible involvement of federal
agencies.
Tamerlan
Tsarnaev, 26, and his 19-year-old brother Dzhokhar are suspected of
setting off two pressure-cooker bombs at the marathon finish line.
Dzhokhar is being held at a prison hospital west of Boston awaiting
trial on charges that carry the possibility of the death penalty.
'THEY
JUST KNEW EACH OTHER'
Todashev
knew Tsarnaev because both were mixed martial-arts fighters in Boston
but had no connection to the bombing, according to friend of
Todashev, identified by local media as Khusen Taramov.
Todashev
had been questioned several times by law enforcement agents since the
day the Tsarnaev brothers were identified as suspects in the Boston
bombing, he told Central Florida News 13.
"After
they found out the bombers were Chechnyans ... they started following
us, watching us," said Taramov.
Todashev
met with FBI agents Tuesday night, he said, adding that the dead man
had been planning to fly back to Chechnya.
Law
enforcement officials have also interviewed another person of Chechen
origin, ex-rebel Musa Khadzhimuratov, at his home in New Hampshire,
the New York Times reported last week. Khadzhimuratov, who had served
as a bodyguard to a top Chechen separatist leader during the region's
civil war with Russia more than a decade ago, also had contact with
Tsarnaev.
Neighbors
said that in recent weeks, they had noticed what looked like
undercover officers in unmarked cars in the parking lot outside the
apartment complex where Todashev was shot and killed. Several
neighbors said he jogged on the paths through the complex shadow
boxing, and sometimes swam laps in the pool and sparred with friends
on the pool deck.
Todashev
was arrested on May 4 and charged with aggravated battery after
getting into a fight with another man over a parking space at an
Orlando shopping mall, according to the Orange County Sheriff's
Office in Orlando.
The
man, who suffered a split upper lip and had several teeth knocked out
of place, did not to press charges against Todashev, who was released
from jail on a $3,500 bond, a sheriff's spokeswoman said.
Before
the Boston bombings, Tamerlan Tsarnaev had been listed on multiple
U.S. government databases, including a master list of potential
terrorism suspects. U.S. authorities also were asked twice by Russia
to investigate Tsarnaev for possible involvement with Islamic
militants, U.S. officials have said.
Also,
on Wednesday afternoon, U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder was
scheduled to meet in Washington with Vladimir Kolokoltsev, Russia's
interior minister. The meeting's agenda was unclear, but U.S.
investigators are anxious to learn what Russian authorities knew
about the Tsarnaevs and about what Tamerlan Tsarnaev did during a
six-month trip to Russia last year.
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