Boston Herald

Full BPD callout ordered for Marathon Monday

- By Sean philip cotter

There’s no “credible threat” to the upcoming Boston Marathon, authoritie­s say as they nonetheles­s call up all available Boston cops and continue to talk to New York City authoritie­s following the terrifying attack there.

“Every available officer will be working,” Superinten­dent-in-Chief Greg Long, the Boston Police Department’s acting commission­er, said in a Tuesday pre-marathon press conference in which he announced a “whole-department call-up.” The department has “a robust and comprehens­ive security plan” that will involve a heavy presence for Marathon Monday near the route and the finish line and normal levels in the rest of the city’s neighborho­ods.

Long and MBTA Transit Police Chief Kenneth Green sought to reassure residents as they appeared with Mayor Michelle Wu in a press conference about safety for the upcoming marathon — just hours after a shooter left more than 10 injured on NYC’s subway system in Brooklyn.

Long said there’s no “credible threat” to the marathon at this point, though he said the BPD will continue to communicat­e with federal, state and other local law-enforcemen­t entities and look at intelligen­ce reports.

Green noted that his department has taken several major steps since the marathon bombings nearly a decade ago, including beefing up explosives-detection teams and creating a serious and high-tech training facility in Southie to help officers be ready for anything that might get thrown their way. For example, he said, they do train for situations like in New York City where there’s smoke and possible improvised weapons.

Green added that much like there’s “no evidence” that the marathon is a target, the same is the case for the MBTA system.

The press conference was announced on Monday, before the NYC attack had happened. It’s normal for city officials to show out for a press conference the week before the marathon, a race that’s one of the most prestigiou­s in the world and has a deep significan­ce locally.

But the events in New York, where a yet-unidentifi­ed gunman shot at least 10 people in the subway during morning commute in Brooklyn, quickly took center stage in the press conference, which the city pushed back by about a half an hour so it wouldn’t step on a televised update from NYC authoritie­s.

“Our thoughts and our prayers and every bit of well wishes are with New York,” Wu said.

The mayor was flanked by Long and Green plus Emergency Management Chief Shumeane Benford, Fire Chief Jack Dempsey, EMS Chief Jim Hooley, Chief of Streets Jascha FranklinHo­dge and Boston Athletics Associatio­n head Tom Grilk.

Each of the city chiefs stressed that the various emergency services were all primed and ready to go, with comprehens­ive plans for any occasion.

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