Boston: One of the suspects in the deadly Boston Marathon bombings was killed during a shoot-out while a hunt for a white-hatted “terrorist” is on at Watertown town near Boston, city police said on Friday.
Police are hunting in Watertown, 10-km from Boston, for someone they believe is the white-hatted “suspect number two” in the Marathon bombings, after a police officer was shot dead last night on the the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) campus.
One suspect was killed in a shootout with police in Watertown, while the second fled on foot, State Police Colonel Timothy Alben said in an early morning press conference.
Police are seeking is “consistent with the description of suspect No 2 who was involved in Monday’s bombing at the Boston Marathon,” Alben said in a reference to the man in the white hat seen in images released by the FBI on Thursday.
“During the exchange of the gunfire, we believe that one of the suspects was struck and ultimately taken into custody. A second suspect was able to flee from that car and there is an active search going on at this point in time,” Colonel Alben told a news conference.
Earlier the FBI released pictures and videos of two suspects and sought the public’s help in identifying the men who are seen carrying backpacks near the finish line of the race before the blasts that killed three persons and injured over 180.
“He is a white skinned Caucasian male with longer brown curly hair. You have the picture, you have seen it, that’s the individual we are looking for…suspect number 1 has been shot dead,” said another city police official.
Boston Police Commissioner Edward F Davis said that they “believe this to be a terrorist.”
“We believe this to be a man here to kill people.”
Police said they would conduct a door-to-door search.
Police have also warned residents in East Watertown to stay in their homes, and not to answer the door unless they see a uniformed police officer outside.
The chaotic incident began with a report of shots fired on the MIT campus at about 10:20 pm (local time) on Thursday night, the Middlesex District Attorney’s office said. A few minutes later, an MIT campus police officer was found with multiple gunshot wounds in his vehicle.
He was pronounced dead at Massachusetts General Hospital, the Boston Herald reported.
Police then received reports of a carjacking at gunpoint by two men in the area of Third Street in Cambridge.
The SUV proceeded out Memorial Drive toward Watertown followed by a long train of police vehicles in pursuit.
At one point during the pursuit, the two suspects opened fire on Watertown police and a Transit Police officer, who was shot and who is now in critical condition at a hospital.
During the gunfight, the man known as Marathon suspect number one was wounded and died in a local hospital. It was not clear how the suspect died.
Police have since been searching for the other bombing suspect.
According to the report, the State Police Bomb Squad was removing possible explosive devices believed to have been thrown from the car in Watertown.
More than 9,000 police, many armed with shotguns and automatic rifles, were sent to the town to find the second suspect and authorities halted all public bus and train services in the Boston region.
The hunt was concentrated on about 3.8 square kilometres of Watertown, a quiet suburb of 35,000 people. (PTI)