FBI Releases Photos of Boston Suspects

BOSTON (AP) —
Photos of suspects in the Boston Marathon bombings are displayed during a news conference in Boston, Massachusetts, Thursday. (REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton)
Photos of suspects in the Boston Marathon bombings are displayed during a news conference in Boston, Massachusetts, Thursday. (REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton)

The FBI released photos and video Thursday of two suspects in the Boston Marathon bombing and asked for the public’s help in identifying them, zeroing in on the two men on surveillance-camera footage less than three days after the deadly attack.

FBI agent Richard DesLauriers said the photos of the two men came from surveillance cameras near the explosion sites. One man is seen wearing a dark baseball cap, the other a white cap worn backward.

The man in the white cap is seen setting down a backpack at the site of one of the blasts, DesLauriers said.

Within moments of the announcement, the FBI website crashed, perhaps because of a crush of visitors.

The images were released hours after President Obama and   first lady Michelle Obama attended an interfaith service in Boston to remember the three people killed and more than 180 wounded in the twin blasts Monday at the marathon finish line.

The break in the investigation came just days after the attack, which tore off limbs, shattered windows and raised the specter of another terrorist attack on U.S. soil.

The suspects are considered armed and extremely dangerous, DesLauriers said, and people who see them should not approach them.

“Do not take any action on your own,” he warned.

Generally, law enforcement agencies release photos of suspects only as a last resort, when they need the public’s help in identifying or capturing someone.

Releasing photos can be a mixed bag. It can tip off a suspect and deny police the element of surprise. It can also trigger an avalanche of tips, forcing police to waste valuable time chasing them down.

At the service earlier in the day, Obama declared to the people of Boston: “Your resolve is the greatest rebuke to whoever committed this heinous act.” He spoke in almost mocking terms of those who commit such violence.

“We finish the race, and we do that because of who we are,” the president said to applause. “And that’s what the perpetrators of such senseless violence — these small, stunted individuals who would destroy instead of build and think somehow that makes them important — that’s what they don’t understand.

“We will find you,” he warned those behind the attack.

Seven victims remained in critical condition. Eight-year-old Martin Richard of Boston, 29-year-old restaurant manager Krystle Campbell of Medford, Mass., and Lu Lingzi, a 23-year-old Boston University graduate student from China, were killed.

Video and photos recovered in the investigation are being examined and enhanced by an FBI unit called the Operational Technologies Division, said Joe DiZinno, former director of the FBI lab in Quantico, Va.

Investigators looked at video footage frame by frame, a laborious process but one that is aided by much more sophisticated facial-recognition technology than is commercially available, forensic specialists said.

“When you have something that is this high-profile, they are going to use every available resource that they have,” said former Miami federal prosecutor Melissa Damian Visconti.

DiZinno, who ran the FBI lab from 2007 to 2010, said any retrieved bomb components, such as the pressure cookers, shrapnel and pieces of timers or wire, are closely examined for fingerprints, DNA, hairs and fibers.

The bomb components would be traced by figuring out the item’s maker, where each piece is typically purchased and whether the device resembles any bombs the FBI has seen in past attacks. The FBI lab keeps a detailed file on past bombings, including many overseas attacks.

“Let’s say there was a timer,” DiZinno said. “Was there a serial number? Who was the manufacturer? That can provide leads for investigators.”

One pressure-cooker maker, the Fagor Group in Spain, said that it has been contacted by U.S. investigators and that company officials are extending full cooperation. The company sells 250,000 pressure cookers a year in the U.S. and a million worldwide.

These two images taken from surveillance video show two people the FBI are calling suspect number 2 (L), in white cap, and suspect number 1 (R), in black cap, as they walk near each other through the crowd in Boston on Monday, before the explosions at the marathon. (AP Photo/FBI)
These two images taken from surveillance video show two people the FBI are calling suspect number 2 (L), in white cap, and suspect number 1 (R), in black cap, as they walk near each other through the crowd in Boston on Monday, before the explosions at the marathon. (AP Photo/FBI)

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