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Pressure cooker bombs suspected in Boston attacks

───   09:40 Wed, 17 Apr 2013

Pressure cooker bombs suspected in Boston attacks | News Article
Boston - FBI agents zeroed in on how the Boston Marathon bombing was carried out - with kitchen pressure cookers packed with explosives, nails and other lethal shrapnel - but said they still didn't know who did it and why.

An intelligence bulletin issued to law enforcement and released late Tuesday includes a picture of a mangled pressure cooker and a torn black bag the Federal Bureau of Investigation says were part of a bomb.

The FBI and other prominent law enforcement agencies repeatedly pleaded for members of the public to come forward with photos, videos or anything suspicious they might have seen or heard.

President Barack Obama branded the attack an act of terrorism but said officials don't know "whether it was planned and executed by a terrorist organization, foreign or domestic, or was the act of a malevolent individual."

US authorities threw virtually every investigation agency into the hunt with more than 1 000 officers working in Boston alone, said Rick DesLauriers, head of the FBI's Boston office.

"This will be a worldwide investigation," DesLauriers told reporters. "We will go to the ends of the earth to identify the subject or subjects responsible for this despicable crime," he added.

DesLauriers said fragments of suspected pressure cookers used to pack the bomb had been found and were being put together by experts. He added that metal pellets and nails had also been recovered.

Too early to draw conclusions

Similar easy-to-make devices are used as roadside bombs in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Shreds of black nylon bags believed to have been used to carry the bombs were also found, the agent said, adding that "the range of suspects and motives remains wide open".

Two US officials said so far there was no indication that al-Qaeda or other foreign extremist organisations were behind the attack, but they added the investigation was still at an early stage.

"It's too early to draw any conclusions," one US official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said.

Doctors, who carried out at least 13 amputations, some at the scene, gave details of the bomb impact.

"These bombs contained small metallic fragments more consistent with pellets and other small pieces of metal, but also spiked points that resembled nails without heads," said George Velmahos, head of emergency medicine at Massachusetts General Hospital.

Vigils

The two bombs, which exploded 13 seconds and about 100m apart, sprayed the shrapnel into the crowd of thousands of people lining Boylston Street to watch the runners cross the finish line.

Three people were killed and at least 180 injured, according to the latest toll. About 17 people were in critical condition. The dead and injured were aged between two and 71 and included nine children.

Among the dead was 8-year-old Martin Richard, who was watching the marathon with his family. His mother suffered a grievous brain injury and his sister lost a leg.

A Chinese woman who was a graduate student at Boston University also died, the university and the Chinese consulate in New York confirmed. However, at the request of her family, her name was not released.

The third fatality was named as Krystle Campbell, a 29-year-old restaurant manager from Massachusetts.

A candle-lit vigil for Richard drew 1 000 people to a park near the family home in the Boston suburb of Dorchester. Hundreds attended another vigil in central Boston and a church service near the scene of the bomb blasts.

Most of the 23 000 runners in the 42km race had finished when the bombs went off.

No intelligence warnings

Boston relived the horror in the many videos taken with telephone cameras that investigators also pored over in the hunt. Police appealed for the public to send in pictures or videos.

Armed National Guard troops and police patrolled Boston airport, commuter trains and buses and authorities warned that tight security would last several days, particularly as Obama was to be in the city on Thursday.

"There were no intelligence warnings that we know of," said Representative Peter King, a member of the House Intelligence Committee, who highlighted that it was not known whether foreign or domestic attackers planted the bombs.

New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco and several other major US cities boosted security as Russian President Vladimir Putin led global condemnation, describing the twin explosions as "barbaric".

German Chancellor Angela Merkel said "nothing justifies such a malicious attack on people attending a peaceful sporting event." Iran also strongly condemned the blasts.

The national flag over the White House was lowered to half-staff and the New York Stock Exchange held a minute of silence before trading started.

Organisers of Sunday's London Marathon said the race would go ahead, but security arrangements were under review.

Sapa;AFP

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