May 22, 2013

Boston Marathon Bombers: Boston bombing was payback for hits on Muslims

130501122127 additional boston suspects horizontal gallery Boston Marathon Bombers: Boston bombing was payback for hits on Muslims
From left, Azamat Tazhayakov and Dias Kadyrbayev went with Boston bombing suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev to in this photo taken from the social media site VK.com. Tazhayakov and Kadyrbayev were arrested on Wednesday, May 1, on charges they tried to throw investigators off Tsarnaev’s trail. See all photography related to the Boston bombings.

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

Source: Dzhokhar Tsarnaev left a message in boat where he was found hiding
He wrote that the Boston Marathon bombing victims were
Dzhokhar also said he expected to join his brother in death
The 19-year-old is being held at a federal

() — Boston Marathon bombing victims were collateral damage in a strike meant as payback for U.S. wars in Muslim lands, the surviving suspect wrote in a message scribbled on the boat where he was found hiding, a told Thursday.

In the message, Dzhokhar Tsarnaev also proclaimed that an attack on one Muslim is an attack on all and said he would not miss older brother Tsarnaev — who died after a firefight with police three days after the bombing — because he would soon be joining him, according to the source.

The writing on the inside of the boat dovetails with what Dzhokhar, 19, told investigators questioning him in a Boston hospital room shortly after his capture, the source said.

CNN has previously cited U.S. officials in reporting that Dzhokhar said U.S. involvement in Afghanistan and Iraq were motivating factors behind the April 15 attack, which killed three people and wounded 275.

According to authorities, the Tsarnaev brothers fashioned from and other materials and detonated them near the of the race.

Three days later, authorities released their images to the public as suspects in the case. Investigators believe they then killed MIT police Officer Sean Collier and hijacked a car before battling authorities in a wild firefight on a Watertown, Massachusetts, street.

Nearly 24 hours later, police found Dzhokhar hiding in the boat after the owner called police to report someone was inside of it.

Dzhokhar — who suffered gunshot wounds to the head, neck, legs and hands — is being held a federal Bureau of Prisons medical facility in Devens, Massachusetts. He has been charged with using a and could face the death penalty if convicted.

Tamerlan was secretly buried in a rural Virginia cemetery this month following protests from Massachusetts residents and officials against burying him in that state.

Authorities have said they believe the brothers acted alone, but are investigating whether they could have learned from or been aided by terror groups, including groups overseas.

Of particular interest has been Tamerlan’s 2012 trip to the semi-autonomous Russian republic of Dagestan, home to numerous Islamic militant groups that have warred against Moscow’s rule.

Russian authorities asked U.S. officials to investigate Tamerlan before the trip, saying they believed he was becoming increasingly involved with radical Islam. The investigated, but found no evidence of extremist activity and closed the case.

U.S. officials learned after the bombings that Russian officials had intercepted a 2011 phone call between the suspect’s mother, living in Dagestan, and one of her sons, in which they reportedly had a vague conversation about jihad, a law enforcement official told CNN earlier.

Some lawmakers, particularly Republicans, have been critical of how law enforcement, intelligence agencies and the administration of President Barack Obama handled the Russian tip.

While Tamerlan and his mother were added to a terror database following the FBI investigation, Tamerlan was allowed to make his Russian trip in 2012, returning six months later.

Boston Marathon Bombers: Boston bomb suspect Tsarnaev’s widow to cooperate

 Boston Marathon Bombers: Boston bomb suspect Tsarnaevs widow to cooperate
Katherine Russell Tsarnaev is under intense scrutiny by the as it investigates the deadly April 15 bombing,(Photo: 2007 AP photo, Warwick Police Department)

Story Highlights

Katherine Russell is undergoing a by
She has added a New York criminal lawyer to her defense team
Tsarnaev, 26, died April 19 after a shootout with police

PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island (AP) — A new criminal defense lawyer for the widow of bombing suspect Tamerlan Tsarnaev says his client will continue to cooperate with investigators but says he plans to keep quiet about the details of her case publicly because that could hurt the investigation.

New York lawyer Joshua Dratel, who has represented several terrorism suspects, joined Katherine Russell’s legal team last week. He joins two Rhode Island-based lawyers who typically focus on civil cases.

Russell hasn’t been charged with any , but she is under intense scrutiny by the FBI as it investigates the deadly April 15 bombing, which killed three people and injured more than 260. Authorities say the attack was carried out by her husband and his brother, Dzhokhar Tsarnaev.

Dratel told The Associated Press on Tuesday that he joined Russell’s legal team because Russell needed someone who could navigate the and to protect her interests. He said she had spoken with investigators and planned to keep cooperating.

“I don’t see that changing in the foreseeable future,” he said. “There’s no between that and her interests at this point.”

Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, 19, is in a facing charges that could bring the death penalty. Tamerlan Tsarnaev, 26, died April 19 after a shootout with police.

Russell, 24, had been living in Cambridge, Massachusetts, with her husband and 2-year-old daughter, but has been staying with her parents in North Kingstown, Rhode Island, since the day her husband was killed. She has reverted to using her , switching from her married name of Tsarnaeva.

Among the questions about Russell is what she knew or saw in the weeks leading up to the bombing, and in the days after it. Two U.S. officials, speaking on condition of , have told the AP that Dzhokhar told investigators the bombs were assembled in the small apartment Russell shared with her husband. One of her Rhode Island lawyers has previously said she was working long hours and was frequently away from the apartment.

Dratel would not discuss details of Russell’s life or relationship with her husband, and would not be specific when asked about her contact with federal investigators, such as when she had spoken with them. He said in his experience, investigators do not want people speaking to the media and publicizing what they are focusing on.

“It would be counterproductive for the investigation and for Katherine’s interests for us to be more forthcoming at this time with any of the details,” he said. “We wouldn’t want to impair the investigation in any way.”

The sole focus of Russell and her legal team, he said, was on the investigation.

“It’s a fluid situation,” Dratel said. “We’re not at the end of it.”

Boston Marathon Bomber: Boston bombing suspect less talkative

130426183550 tsr foreman boston suspect prison facility 00001325 story top Boston Marathon Bomber: Boston bombing suspect less talkative

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

Official: Others who know about Tsarnaev’s laptop led authorities to search a dump
A clerk says a carjacking victim came inside screaming, fearing for his life
Surviving suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev goes from a to a
Source: Tsarnaev hasn’t provided “substantive” info in days, but earlier info was helpful

(CNN) — The Boston bombing suspect has become less talkative since authorities read him his Miranda rights before charging him with using a . They also moved him from a private to a prison hospital.

But the information Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, 19, gave in two sessions of questioning spanning three days has produced good leads, a U.S. law enforcement official said.

Investigators spent Friday combing a dump in New Bedford, Massachusetts, for his laptop and other clues that could shed light on the suspects behind the bloody attack, a law enforcement official with knowledge of the investigation said.

Tsarnaev led authorities to look there, the source said, and others who may have knowledge of the computer’s whereabouts or may have played a role in disposing it also provided leads that prompted the search.

Suspect in detainee hospital

Dzhokhar Tsarnaev moved Friday from Boston’s , where he had been held since his capture a week ago, to a federal inmate medical center 40 miles away.

Beth Israel treated some of the more than 260 people injured in the Boston Marathon attack allegedly carried out by Dzhokhar and Tsarnaev. Some 30 of them remained hospitalized Friday, including one in , according to a CNN tally.

The Federal Medical Center in Fort Devens, Massachusetts is on the grounds of a former and is designed for detainees requiring ongoing medical care.

Dzhokhar Tsarnaev had what appeared to be gunshot wounds to his head, neck, legs and hand when he was captured April 19 after a nearly 24-hour manhunt, according to the criminal complaint accusing him in the marathon blasts. His 26-year-old brother died after a gunfight hours earlier.

Family in Russia

Their mother, Zubeidat Tsarnaev, said Friday that she and her husband had left their home in Dagestan for another part of Russia.

The brothers’ father, Anzor Tsarnaev, had said he’d planned to travel to the United States. But that trip has been delayed indefinitely for health reasons.

The mother will not be flying to the United States, where she is wanted on felony charges of shoplifting and destruction of property.

The family lived in Massachusetts before Zubeidat Tsarnaev jumped bail after her arrest on the charges in 2012. The parents moved to Dagestan, a semiautonomous republic in southern Russia that year.

Russian authorities twice raised concerns in 2011 to U.S. authorities about the mother and her older son, sources said.

U.S. authorities added both their names to the Terrorist Identities Datamart Environment, or TIDE, database, which includes half a million names.

Suspects’ mother describes her last conversation with her sons

Zubeidat Tsarnaev has denied the reality of the bombing. She believes it was fake. She said she has seen a video pushing the wild idea, and that there was no blood, that paint was used instead.

While insisting Russian and U.S. authorities often work together, Russian President Vladimir Putin has said that he wished U.S. authorities could have done more to prevent the Boston attack.

But he also lashed out against those in the West who have slammed Russia for human rights abuses in its actions toward Chechnya, the Tsarnaevs’ original war-torn homeland.

Three days after that attack, and hours after authorities released images of the two suspects, they spontaneously decided to go to New York’s to blow up their six remaining explosives, Dzhokhar Tsarnaev told investigators.

But a botched carjacking spoiled the impromptu road trip, said Tsarnaev, whose account was outlined by New York’s police commissioner.

Before forcing their way into the vehicle the night of April 18, the brothers shot dead a campus at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, police said.

The hijacked vehicle, a Mercedes SUV, ran low on fuel, and they stopped at a service station, where the vehicle’s owner escaped. Shortly thereafter, police picked up the trail of the SUV and pursued it. Authorities say the men threw bombs out the vehicle’s window at them. The gun battle and Tamerlan Tsarnaev’s death followed.

In a Boston Globe story, the man who was carjacked — a 26-year-old entrepreneur identified only as Danny — described his 90-minute ordeal that began when a man brandishing a silver handgun got into his Mercedes.

Danny told the Globe, the gun-wielding man confessed to pulling off the Boston bombing and to killing a police officer in Cambridge, Massachusetts, where MIT’s campus is located. They stopped to pick up a second man, presumably the other brother.

Danny’s friend spoke to CNN

Danny relayed his experience to one of his former professors, James Fox, who teaches criminology. Fox spoke with CNN’s Jake Tapper on Friday.

“One of the alleged bombers got out … knocked on the passenger window. Danny couldn’t hear what he was saying, so he rolled down the window to hear. Tamerlan then reached inside, opened the door, pulled out a gun, got in the passenger seat, and pointed the gun at Danny,” Fox said.

During the harrowing ride, Danny did various things to convince Tamerlan to spare his life. He emphasized he is from China, and that Chinese are very good to Muslims. He also downplayed the cost of his Mercedes SUV.

At first, Dzhokhar Tsarnaev continued to drive the sedan, trailing the SUV. But he eventually climbed into the car with Danny and Tamerlan, Fox said.

“As long as that drive continued, over an hour and a half, there was interaction. There was talk about cell phones, and CD players, and girls. He became a person, and that was critical to his survival,” Fox said.

When they stopped to refuel at a Shell gas station, Danny managed to slip away to a Mobil gas station, where he told an employee there what happened.

“He fell down, screaming, ‘Please, please call … the police. They want to kill me. They have a gun, they have a bomb,’” Tarek Ahmed, the clerk working in the station, told CNN’s Piers Morgan.

“I was waiting (for) someone to shoot me at this moment,” Ahmed said, adding he couldn’t see outside from where he called.

Within five minutes, the gas station was teeming with police, who quickly took up pursuit of the stolen SUV.

Egypt’s Mubarak in critical condition

80e3114c02ba7ae4ee5a97959896ed99 Egypts Mubarak in critical condition

CAIRO (AP) – Egypt’s ailing former president Hosni Mubarak is slipping in and out of consciousness eight days after he was transferred to a hospital inside a Cairo prison to serve his , a said on Sunday.

In order to squash rumors of his death, authorities granted his wife, former first lady Suzanne Mubarak, and her two daughters-in-law special permission to visit him early on Sunday morning, according to the official who spoke from inside Torah prison.

Since then, he has suffered from an and required assistance in breathing. The official told The Associated Press that Mubarak lives only on liquids and yogurt. He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media.

Mubarak’s health is reported to have collapsed since his June 2 conviction for failing to stop the killing of protesters during the uprising that overthrew him in 2011. His life sentence saw him transferred immediately to a prison hospital, instead of the and other facilities where he had been held since his April 2011 arrest.

Authorities have turned down several requests by Mubarak’s family to transfer the ousted president back to a , the official said.

On Saturday Mubarak’s wife was denied access to the where he was placed, as authorities limit family visitations to one a month.

According to security officials quoted by al-Masry al-Youm daily, Mrs. Mubarak lashed out at for not giving her husband permission to seek treatment outside the prison. “You will be responsible for his death,” she allegedly said.

Mubarak’s two sons Alaa and Gamal are also being held. They were acquitted on June 2 of , but still face separate charges of insider trading.

On Saturday, Egypt’s state agency MENA quoted officials as saying that Mubarak is at risk of stroke, quoting a medical team’s report.

Other media reports said that his lawyer Farid al-Deeb informed him that he will soon be transferred back to a military facility in the Cairo suburb of Maadi.

In his last public appearance on June 2, the bedridden Mubarak sat stoned-faced in the courtroom cage. However, officials said that he broke into tears when he learned that he will be transferred to Torah’s prison. It took officials hours to convince Mubarak to leave the helicopter that ferried him from the courthouse to the prison.

Media reports quoted Mubarak at the time as saying the military council who took over after his ouster had deceived him. “Egypt has sold me. They want me to die here,” he reportedly said.

The verdict sparked a new wave of protests by tens of thousands of around the country who allege the verdict was determined by political pressure from the country’s military rulers, doing a favor for their former president.

They say the verdict as issued can be easily overturned in an appeal, and that the acquittals of six top security officials mean that killers of the protesters will remain unknown. Many hoped Mubarak or his top officials would be convicted of murder and receive the .

Ousted Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak gets life in prison

1e8d1b047786b8f45e476918b0511b91 Ousted Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak gets life in prison

CAIRO (AP) – Hosni Mubarak was sentenced to Saturday for failing to stop the killing of protesters during the that forced him from power last year. But the ousted president and his sons were acquitted of in a mixed verdict that swiftly provoked a new wave of anger on Egypt’s streets.

After the sentencing, the 84-year old, ailing Mubarak cried in protest and resisted leaving the helicopter that took him from the Cairo to a prison hospital for the first time, according to . Since Mubarak was ordered detained last April, he has been held in several different military hospitals but never in a prison hospital. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to media.

Earlier, Mubarak sat stone-faced and frowning in the courtroom’s metal defendant while judge Ahmed Rifaat read out the conviction and sentence against him, showing no emotion with his eyes concealed by dark sunglasses. His sons Gamal and looked nervous but also did not react to either the conviction of their father or their own acquittals.

Mubarak was convicted of in the killing of some 900 protesters during the 18-day uprising that forced him to resign in February 2011. He and his two sons were acquitted of corruption charges, along with a a who is on the run.

Rifaat delivered a strongly worded statement before handing down the sentences. He described Mubarak’s era as “30 years of darkness” and “a darkened nightmare” that ended only when Egyptians rose up to demand change.

“They peacefully demanded democracy from rulers who held a tight grip on power,” the judge said about the Jan.25-Feb. 11 uprising last year.

Angered by the acquittals of the Mubarak sons and six top police officers, lawyers for the victims’ families broke out chanting inside the courtroom as soon as Rifaat finished reading the verdict.

“The people want to cleanse the judiciary,” they chanted. Some raised banners that read: “God’s verdict is execution.”

The charges related to killing protesters carried a possible death sentence that the judge chose not to impose, opting instead to send Mubarak to prison for the rest of his life.

Outside the courtroom on the outskirts of the capital, there was jubilation initially when the conviction was announced, with one man falling to his knees and prostrating himself in prayer on the pavement and others dancing, pumping fists in the air and shooting off fireworks.

But that scene soon descended into tensions and scuffles, as thousands of riot police in helmets and shields held the restive, mostly anti-Mubarak crowd back behind a cordon protecting the court.

Later, thousands of protesters gathered in Cairo’s Tahrir Square, birthplace of the uprising, and in the Mediterranean city of Alexandria on Egypt’s northern coast. They chanted slogans denouncing the trial as “theatrical” and against the ruling generals who took over for Mubarak, led by his former defense minister. “Execute them, execute them!” chanted the protesters in Alexandria.

Mubarak and his former Interior Minister Habib el-Adly, who was in charge of the police and other security forces at the time of the uprising, were convicted of failing to act to stop the killings during the opening days of the revolt, when the bulk of protesters died. El-Adly also received a .

Most of the dead were either shot or run over by police vehicles in Cairo and a string of major cities across the country.

Mubarak and his sons — one-time heir apparent Gamal and wealthy businessman Alaa — were acquitted on corruption charges, with the judge citing a 10-year statute of limitations that had lapsed since the alleged crimes were committed.

Just days before the verdict was made public, the state prosecutor leveled new charges of against the two sons. It now appears that these charges may have been an attempt to head off new public outrage once the acquittals of the Mubarak sons were made public.

It has appeared all along that prosecutions since Mubarak’s fall targeting relatively few high level officials and their cronies have been motivated largely by appeasing public anger expressed in massive street protests that continued long after Mubarak’s ouster.

Scores of policemen charged with killing protesters have either been acquitted or sentenced to light sentences, angering relatives of the victims and the pro-democracy youth groups behind the uprising.

Rock-throwing and fist fights outside the courtroom left at least 20 people injured, and a police official said that four people were arrested.

Thousands of riot police and policemen riding horses had cordoned off the building to prevent protesters and relatives of those slain during the uprising from getting too close. Hundreds stood outside, waving Egyptian flags and chanting slogans demanding “retribution.” Some spread Mubarak’s picture on the asphalt and walked over it.

Mubarak’s verdict came just days after presidential elections have been boiled down to a June 16-17 contest between Mubarak’s last prime minister, one-time protege Ahmed Shafiq, and Mohammed Morsi of the Muslim Brotherhood, a fundamentalist Islamist group that Mubarak persecuted for most of his years in power.