By Svea
Herbst-Bayliss and Scott Malone
(Reuters) -
Investigators believe they have identified a suspect in the Boston Marathon
bombing from security video, a law enforcement source said on Wednesday, but no
arrest had yet been made.
Police may
make an appeal to the public for more information at a news conference
scheduled for later on Wednesday, a government source said.
Earlier,
CNN reported a suspect was in custody, citing Boston and law enforcement sources, but later
retracted its report.
Three
Reuters sources also disputed there had been an arrest. Officials later
confirmed the arrest report was inaccurate.
"Despite
reports to the contrary there has not been an arrest in the marathon
attack," Boston
police said in a statement.
The U.S.
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) issued a statement asking the media to
"exercise caution and attempt to verify information through appropriate
official channels before reporting."
The
identification of a possible suspect marked the most significant,
publicly-disclosed break since Monday's blasts at the Boston Marathon's finish
line killed three people and injured 176 others in the worst attack on U.S. soil since
September 11, 2001.
The bombs
killed an 8-year old boy, Martin Richard, a 29-year-old woman, Krystle Campbell
and a Boston University graduate student who was a
Chinese citizen. Boston
University has identified
the student as Lu Lingzi.
The crowded
scene in central Boston
was recorded by surveillance cameras and media outlets, providing investigators
with significant video of the area before and after the two blasts.
Investigators
were also searching through thousands of pieces of evidence from cellphone
pictures to shrapnel pulled from victims' legs.
Based on
the shards of metal, fabric, wires and a battery recovered at the scene, the
focus turned to whoever may have placed homemade bombs in pressure cooker pots
and taken them in heavy black nylon bags to the finish line of the world-famous
race watched by thousands of spectators.
Streets
around the bombing site remained closed to traffic and pedestrians on
Wednesday, with police continuing their work.
SENSE OF
RELIEF
Rich
Havens, the finish area coordinator at the Boston Marathon who also witnessed
Monday's blasts, said he was relieved officials had identified a suspect.
"When
the police said we are turning every rock, they really meant it," Havens
said. "There is a sense of relief that the amazing work they are doing -
breaking through bits and pieces - is actually turning things up. And that
they've gotten to this point in a matter of two days."
Bomb scene
pictures produced by the Boston Joint Terrorism Task Force and released on
Tuesday show the remains of an explosive device including twisted pieces of a
metal container, wires, a battery and what appears to be a small circuit board.
One picture
shows a few inches of charred wire attached to a small box, and another depicts
a half-inch nail and a zipper head stained with blood. Another shows a
Tenergy-brand battery attached to black and red wires through a broken plastic
cap. Several photos show a twisted metal lid with bolts.
No one has
claimed responsibility for the attack.
"Whether
it's homegrown or foreign, we just don't know yet. And so I'm not going to
contribute to any speculation on that," said U.S. Secretary of State John
Kerry, who until January was Massachusetts '
senior senator. "It's just hard to believe that a Patriots' Day holiday,
which is normally such time of festivities, turned into bloody mayhem."
The head of
trauma surgery at Boston
Medical Center ,
which was still treating 19 victims on Wednesday, said his hospital was
collecting the shards of metal, plastic, wood and concrete they had pulled from
the injured to save for law enforcement inspectors. Other hospitals were doing
the same.
"We've
taken on large quantities of pieces," Dr. Peter Burke of Boston Medical
Center told reporters
"We send them to the pathologists and they are available to the
police."
Security
officials who spoke on condition of anonymity said instructions for building
pressure-cooker bombs similar to the ones used in Boston can be found on the Internet and are
relatively primitive.
Pressure
cookers had also been discovered in numerous foiled attack plots in both the United States and overseas in recent years,
including the failed bombing attempt in New York 's
Times Square on May 1, 2010, the officials
said.
(Additional
reporting by Mark Hosenball in Washington , Tim
McLaughlin in Boston and Terril Yue Jones in Beijing ; editing by
Daniel Trotta, Grant McCool, Gary Crosse)
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