The F.B.I. today released still and video images of two
suspects in the Boston Marathon bombings - including a man who was seen setting
down a backpack at the site of the second blast - and appealed for the public’s
help identifying the men.
One was seen placing a dark-colored backpack outside the
Forum restaurant, the site of the second bombing, just minutes before the
explosion, said Richard DesLauriers, the special agent in charge of the
F.B.I.'s Boston field office.
“Today we are enlisting the public’s help to identify the
two suspects,” Mr. DesLauriers said at a news conference on Thursday evening in
Boston.
In the video, both men are carrying backpacks, and wearing
baseball caps, one a dark cap and one a white cap turned backward. They are
walking along Boylston Street.
The images were located as investigators spent hours since
Monday afternoon’s attack poring over surveillance videos from stores near the
scenes of the two deadly blasts, as well as footage take on smartphones and by
television crews filming the Boston Marathon. “Within the last day or so,
through that careful process, we initially developed a single person of
interest,” Mr. DesLauriers said. “Not knowing if the individual was acting
alone or in concert with others, we obviously worked with extreme purpose to
make that determination.”
After a concerted effort, he said, investigators determined
that a second suspect had been involved.
Both men appeared to be wearing dark-colored zippered-front
jackets. The first, whom Mr. DesLauriers called Suspect 1, wore a dark-colored
baseball cap with a white emblem on it and markings on the front, a white
T-shirt and tan pants. Visible around the edges of his cap was short dark hair.
The man he identified as Suspect 2 wore a white baseball cap backward, with
dark-colored pants. He had slightly longer curly hair. The men appeared to be
wearing hooded sweatshirts beneath the jackets.
Mr. DesLauriers did not characterize the appearance of the
men or offer an opinion as to their possible ethnicity or national origin.
Mr. DesLauriers urged anyone who has seen the men, or who
knows who they are, to call 1-800-CALL-FBI (1-800-225-5324).
(New York Times)
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