Washington: Investigators looking for clues to the Boston Marathon bombings that killed three people and injured another 176 would try to reconstruct the bombs said to be made of pressure cookers filled with nails and ball bearings.
Fragments of nails, ball bearings and scraps of black nylon — possibly from a backpack found at the site of the twin blasts near the marathon finish line are being sent to the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s laboratory at Quantico, Virginia, “for a complete and thorough analysis.”
One aim is to better understand how they worked; another is to look for “identification clues” such as fingerprints, DNA or serial numbers to help track who planted them, CNN reported citing Boston law enforcement source.
The pieces recovered so far suggest the devices, which were identical, could carry 6 litres of liquid apiece, officials said. The parts found include a partial circuit board, which would be used to detonate a device.
At a news conference in Boston Tuesday, Rick DesLauriers, the special agent in charge of the FBI’s Boston office who is leading the investigation, also asked people to report anyone who talked about targeting Monday’s race or showed interest in explosives.
He urged anyone who might have heard the sounds of explosions in remote areas — possibly by someone testing a bomb — or saw someone carrying “an unusually heavy, dark-coloured bag” around Monday to come forward.
There has been no claim of responsibility, Des-Lauriers said: “The range of suspects and motives remains wide open.” And so far, investigators have found no foreign or Al Qaeda connection to the bombings, a US official told CNN.
President Barack Obama, who called the bombings an “act of terror” Tuesday, will travel to Boston on Thursday to speak at an interfaith service dedicated to the victims of Monday’s bombing, the White House announced in a statement
As cities across the United States heightened security, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano said the bombings don’t appear to be harbingers of “a broader plot.”
But she urged Americans “to remain vigilant and immediately report any signs of suspicious activity to local law enforcement officials.” (IANS)