Boston bombing suspect manhunt
BOSTON (AP) — Key moments related to the search for the Boston Marathon bombing suspects, based on reports from the Middlesex County district attorney, Massachusetts State Police and Boston police. At 5:10 p.m. Thursday, investigators of the bombings release
photographs and video of two suspects. They ask for the public's help in
identifying the men. Around 10:20 p.m., shots are fired on the campus of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, just outside Boston.
At 10:30 p.m., an MIT campus police officer
who was responding to a disturbance is found shot multiple times in his
vehicle, apparently in a confrontation with the Boston Marathon bombing
suspects. He is later pronounced dead. Shortly afterward, two armed men reportedly carjack a Mercedes SUV
in Cambridge. A man who was in the vehicle is held for about a half hour
and then released unharmed at a gas station on Memorial Drive in
Cambridge.
Police soon pursue the carjacked vehicle in Watertown, just west of Cambridge. Some kind of explosive devices are thrown from the vehicle in an
apparent attempt to stop police. The carjackers and police exchange
gunfire. A transit police officer is seriously injured. One suspect,
later identified as Suspect No. 1 in the marathon bombings, is
critically injured and later pronounced dead.
Authorities launch a manhunt for the other suspect. Around 1 a.m. Friday, gunshots and explosions are heard in
Watertown. Dozens of police officers and FBI agents converge on a
Watertown neighborhood. A helicopter circles overhead.
Around 4:30 a.m., Massachusetts
state and Boston police hold a short outdoor news briefing. They tell
people living in that section of eastern Watertown to stay in their
homes. They identify the carjackers as the same men suspected in the
marathon bombings. Overnight, police also release a photograph of a man
believed to be Suspect No. 2, apparently taken from store video earlier
in the evening at a 7-Eleven convenience store in Cambridge. He is
wearing a gray hoodie-style sweatshirt. Around 5:50 a.m. authorities urge residents in Watertown, Newton,
Waltham, Belmont, Cambridge, Arlington and the Allston-Brighton
neighborhoods of Boston to stay indoors. All mass transit is shut down.
Around 6:35 a.m., The Associated Press reports that the bomb
suspects are from a Russian region near Chechnya and lived in the United
States for at least a year. Around 6:45 a.m., The Associated Press identifies the surviving
Boston bomb suspect as Dzhokhar A. Tsarnaev, 19, who has been living in
Cambridge.
Around 8 a.m., Boston's police commissioner says all of Boston must stay in their homes as the search for the surviving suspect in the bombings continues. Around 8:40 a.m., a U.S. law enforcement official and the uncle of
the suspects confirm that the name of the slain suspect is Tamerlan
Tsarnaev, Dzhokhar Tsarnaev's older brother. Around 10:20 a.m., Connecticut State Police say a gray Honda CRV
believed to be linked to Dzhokhar Tsarnaev has been recovered in Boston. Around 10:35 a.m., the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth says
it closed its campus and ordered an evacuation after confirming that
Dzhokhar Tsarnaev is registered there. The school says it closed the
campus "out of an abundance of caution" as the search continued.
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