Montreal Gazette

‘There were so many people without legs’

Explosions timed for highest concentrat­ion of runners, fans

- TIM ROHAN

BOSTON — About 26.19 miles into the 26.2-mile Boston Marathon, explosions shook the street and sent runners franticall­y racing for cover. The marathon finish line, normally a festive zone of celebratio­n and exhaustion, was suddenly like a war zone.

“These runners just finished and they don’t have legs now,” said Roupen Bastajian, 35, a Rhode Island state trooper and a former Marine. “So many of them. There are so many people without legs. It’s all blood. There’s blood everywhere. You got bones, fragments. It’s disgusting.”

Had Bastajian run a few strides slower, as he did in 2011, he might have been among the dozens of victims injured in Monday’s bomb blasts. Instead, he was among the runners treating other runners, a makeshift emergency medical service of exhausted athletes.

“We put tourniquet­s on,” Bastajian said. “I tied at least five, six legs with tourniquet­s.”

The timing of the explosions — just over four hours from the official start — was especially devastatin­g because they happened when a high concentrat­ion of runners in the main field were arriving at the finish line.

In last year’s Boston Marathon, for example, more than 9,100 crossed the finish line — 42 per cent of all finishers — in the 30 minutes before and after the time of the explosions.

Deirdre Hatfield, 27, was steps away from the finish line when she heard a blast.

She saw bodies flying out into the street. She saw a couple of children who appeared lifeless. She saw people without legs.

“When the bodies landed around me I thought, Am I burning? Maybe I’m burning and I don’t feel it,” she said. “If I blow up, I just hope I won’t feel it.”

She looked inside the Starbucks to her left, which seemed to be where the blast occurred. “What was so eerie, you looked in you knew there had to be 100 people in there, but there was no sign of movement,” she said.

Hatfield quickly realized that the blasts were part of some sort of attack. She began trying to think where the next explosion might occur.

Finally, she turned down a side street and ran to the hotel where she agreed to meet her boyfriend and family after the race.

Amid the chaos, the authoritie­s directed runners and onlookers to the area designated for family members awaiting loved ones at the end of the race. It was traditiona­lly a place of panting pride, sweaty hugs and exhausted relief.

But on Monday, it transforme­d into a place of dread, as news of the attack spread through the crowd and people awaited word. One woman screamed over the din toward the streets roped off for runners: “Lisa! Lisa!”

Some people saw the explosions as clouds of white smoke. To others, they looked orange — a fireball that nearly reached the top of a nearby traffic light.

Groups of runners, including a row of women in pink and neon tank tops and a man in a red windbreake­r — kept going a few paces at least, as if unsure of what they were seeing.

Some runners stopped in the middle of the street, confused and frightened. Others turned around and started running back the way they came — only faster this time.

“It is kind of ironic that you just finished running a marathon and you want to keep running away,” said Sarah Joyce, 21, who had just finished her first marathon when she heard the blast.

Bruce Mendelsohn, 44, was at a

“There was a very loud boom, and three to five seconds later, another one.”

BRUCE MENDELSOHN, WITNESS

party in a third-floor office above where the bombs went off. His brother, Aaron, had finished the race earlier.

“There was a very loud boom, and three to five second later, there was another one,” said Bruce Mendelsohn, an army veteran who now works in public relations. He ran outside. “There was blood smeared in the streets and on the sidewalk,” he said.

Mendelsohn could not be sure how many people had been killed or injured, but among the bodies he said he saw women, children and runners. The wounds, he said, appeared to be “lower torso.”

As Melissa Fryback, 42, was heading into the home stretch, she realized she was on pace for one of her best times ever. She steeled herself for the last three miles and finished in 3 hours 44 minutes. She met up with her boyfriend, and the two had made it about two blocks from the finish line when they heard the blasts.

“I can’t help but wonder that if I hadn’t pushed like that, it could have been me,” she said. “I can’t put myself back together.”

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 ?? WBZTV/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this image from video provided by WBZ TV, spectators and runners run from what was described as twin explosions that shook the finish line of the Boston Marathon, Monday, just as many runners were returning.
WBZTV/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this image from video provided by WBZ TV, spectators and runners run from what was described as twin explosions that shook the finish line of the Boston Marathon, Monday, just as many runners were returning.

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