Montreal Gazette

ZEROING IN ON SUSPECTS

Frame-by-frame examinatio­n of video points to two men in Boston bombing

- DENISE LAVOIE and ADAM GELLER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

‘ARMED AND DANGEROUS’

The FBI is asking for the public’s help in identifyin­g these two men, seen walking in the crowd before the Boston Marathon bombings. The agency released photos and video from surveillan­ce cameras. At an interfaith service in Boston earlier yesterday, U.S. President Barack Obama called the bombers “these small, stunted individual­s.”

BOSTON — The FBI released photos and video of two suspects in the deadly Boston Marathon bombings and asked for the public’s help in identifyin­g the men. The agency’s website crashed within moments Thursday.

FBI agent Richard DesLaurier­s said the images are from surveillan­ce cameras near the explosion sites shortly before Monday’s blasts at the world’s most famous marathon. The men are seen walking together in the crowd, and the man in the white cap is seen setting down a backpack at one site near the finish line, DesLaurier­s said.

“We consider them to be armed and extremely dangerous,” DesLaurier­s said, asking the public not to approach the men. He said there is no additional danger that the FBI knows of at the moment.

Monday’s blasts killed three, including a student from China, and injured more than 180.

The images came out hours after U.S. President Barack Obama promised a grieving city to hunt down whoever was responsibl­e.

The images show two young-looking men wearing baseball caps and jackets, and carrying backpacks along the race route and weaving through the crowd. The planting of the backpack is not depicted in the video footage that was made public.

The FBI would not discuss the men’s ethnicity.

“It would be inappropri­ate to comment on the ethnicity of the men because it could lead people down the wrong path potentiall­y,” said FBI agent Greg Comcowich, a spokesman for the Boston FBI office.

The informatio­n on the first suspect was developed within a day or so before its release, DesLaurier­s said. Agent Daniel Curtin said the FBI did not issue the photos earlier because authoritie­s wanted to be meticulous: “It’s important to get it right.”

Generally, law enforcemen­t agencies release photos of suspects only as a last resort, when they need the public’s help. Releasing photos can tip off a suspect and deny police the element of surprise. It can also trigger an avalanche of tips, forcing police to waste time chasing them down.

“Each piece moves us toward justice,” DesLaurier­s said of the latest informatio­n to emerge.

At an interfaith service honouring the victims, Obama called the perpetrato­rs of the attack “these small, stunted individual­s who would destroy instead of build.”

The blasts killed 8-year-old Martin Richard, 29-year-old Krystle Campbell and Lu Lingzi, a graduate student from China. Seven victims remained in critical condition.

The bombs were crudely fashioned from ordinary kitchen pressure cookers packed with explosives, nails and ball bearings, investigat­ors and others close to the case said.

Investigat­ors suspect the devices were then hidden in duffel bags and left on the ground.

They exploded within 15 seconds of each other near the finish line at a high-traffic time when thousands of runners were pouring in.

Several media outlets had reported that a suspect had been identified from a surveillan­ce video taken at a Lord & Taylor department store between the sites of the bomb blasts.

The investigat­ion will probably collect about a million hours of videotape from fixed security cameras and cellphones and cameras used by spectators, said Gene Grindstaff, a scientist at Intergraph Corp., a company that makes video analysis software used by the FBI and other law enforcemen­t agencies.

Video and photos are being examined and enhanced by an FBI unit called the operationa­l technologi­es division, said Joe DiZinno, former director of the FBI lab in Virginia.

Investigat­ors are looking at video frame by frame — a laborious process, though one aided by far more sophistica­ted facial recognitio­n technology than is commercial­ly available, forensic specialist­s said.

 ?? FBI VIA GETTY IMAGES ??
FBI VIA GETTY IMAGES
 ?? PHOTOS: AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? This video image released by the FBI shows a man with a backpack walking along the route of the Boston Marathon on Monday.
PHOTOS: AFP/GETTY IMAGES This video image released by the FBI shows a man with a backpack walking along the route of the Boston Marathon on Monday.
 ??  ?? The FBI are seeking a man wearing a white cap shown in a surveillan­ce video image released by the federal agency on Thursday.
The FBI are seeking a man wearing a white cap shown in a surveillan­ce video image released by the federal agency on Thursday.

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