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>From backpacks to 'flash-bangs': Boston's week of terror
By   Ann O'Neill  and   Deborah    Feyeric  k , CNN
April 21, 2013 -- Updated 2049 GMT (0449 HKT) CNN.com 
Editor's note: This reconstruction of events is based on CNN reporting. Most of 
the law enforcement details were disclosed at news conferences, but information 
drawn from surveillance video was 
obtained from sources who spoke with correspondents Deborah Feyerick and Susan 
Candiotti in Boston on the condition that they not be named. The 
story also contains information from verified Twitter accounts. A few 
details from other media sources are attributed to those sources. 
Boston (CNN) -- Two young men with backpacks walked with 
purpose down Boylston Street Monday afternoon, weaving through the crowd on the 
sidelines of the Boston Marathon. It seemed like they'd been 
there before, like they knew where they were going. 
Chief: Suspect did fire shots from boat 
Final moments of Boston terror manhunt 
Suspect can't talk, the evidence can 
The Boston bombings in 3 minutes
The one in the white cap reached 
his destination first, about two blocks from the finish line. The other 
one, wearing a hoodie and a black cap, kept going. Some three minutes 
later, he elbowed his way through the crowd and dropped his backpack 
near the finish line. It was about 15 minutes before 3 p.m.
The first explosion, at 2:50 p.m., 
sent smoke and flames into the air -- and glass and nails and ball 
bearings and BBs into the crowd. It seemed to inflict the cruelest kind 
of damage to any marathon fan: It attacked their legs.
Jeff Bauman, who survived but lost 
both legs, saw the man in the black cap drop his bag. Two women standing nearby 
-- restaurant manager Krystle Campbell and Chinese grad student 
Lingzi Lu -- died in the blast. 
As some people fell and others ran screaming, the man in the black cap casually 
walked away.
Twelve seconds later, another 
explosion, more screams, more panicked people running. This time, a 
little boy, Martin Richards, 8, lay on the sidewalk, fatally injured. 
His mother and sister also were seriously hurt. In the crowd, the man in the 
white cap strolled calmly and turned the corner onto Fairfield 
Street.
Later, an official who asked not to be named told CNN: "When the bombs blow up, 
when most people are 
running away and victims were lying on the ground, the two suspects walk away 
pretty casually.
"They acted differently than everyone else."
That night, a few minutes after 8, a college student using the screen name 
J_tsar tweeted a quote from rapper Jay-Z:
"Ain't no love in the heart of the city. stay safe people." 
For the next three days, Boston and the rest of the nation wondered who was 
behind the first terror attack 
of its kind on U.S. soil since September 11, 2001. Was it al Qaeda, a 
homegrown terror group or a lone wolf?
Boston terror attacks timeline 
Because the bombing was suspected 
terrorism, the FBI quickly took the investigative lead. But there was no 
chatter among the jihadists. No one claimed responsibility for the 
blast.
But J_tsar was a chatterbox on Twitter. Early Tuesday, just past midnight, he 
sent out another, more mysterious tweet: "There are people that know the truth 
but stay silent & there are people 
that speak the truth but we don't hear them cuz they're the minority." 
All day Tuesday, the news focused 
on the gruesome details of the crime scene and those who were lost or 
maimed. More than 170 people were hurt by flying glass, shrapnel, ball 
bearings and nails, some of them grievously. The sidewalks along 
Boylston Street were slick with blood in some spots.
President Obama condemned the 
marathon bombings as terrorism and vowed that those responsible would 
feel the full weight of justice.
Sometime that day, a college 
student named Dzhokhar Tsarnaev came into Gilberto Junior's body shop in the 
suburb of Somerville, Junior told The New York Times. He knew Dzhokhar and his 
older brother Tamerlan as "regular kids" with a taste for expensive cars. 
Dzhokhar said he needed his white Mercedes 
station wagon immediately.
The car was still missing a bumper 
and tail lights, and his customer seemed nervous, Junior told the 
newspaper. He bit his nails and his knees where shaky. The body shop 
owner wondered if he was under the influence of drugs.
That night J_tsar tweeted up a storm:
He quoted the rapper Eminem: "Nowadays everybody wanna talk like they got 
somethin to say but nothin comes out when they move their lips; just a bunch of 
gibberish." 
He slapped down an Internet rumor that a man had planned to propose to his 
girlfriend at the marathon but found her dead: "fake story." 
He replied to someone else's tweet: "and they what 'god hates dead people?' Or 
victims of tragedies? Lol those people are cooked." 
And he tweeted: "So then I says to him, I says, relax bro my beard is not 
loaded." 
Behind the scenes, federal 
investigators began to sort through what has become the norm in a 
post-9/11 society: Thousands upon thousands of surveillance photos and 
videos taken from cameras at traffic lights, store fronts, parking 
garages and other places along the marathon route.
The crime scene extended for 12 
blocks. The 26.2-mile marathon route is open to the public and the event is 
heavily photographed. Authorities asked for amateur cell phone 
photos and videos from anyone who had been at the marathon. Who might 
investigators find on the sidelines, in the background?
During a shift change at the Boston Police Department, a supervisor told 
officers: "When you get home 
tonight hug your kids once and then hug them again. And that's an 
order."
As Tuesday melted into Wednesday, J_tsar was back on Twitter. "I'm a stress 
free kind of guy," he tweeted shortly before 2 a.m.
The day seemed like any other at 
school for the Mercedes-driving 19-year-old later identified as the 
tweeter: Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, a sophomore at the University of 
Massachusetts-Dartmouth. His student ID told the story of his day; like 
all students, he has to swipe the card to enter buildings on campus.
Card swipe information shows he 
went to the gym and spent Wednesday night at his dorm. Dzhokhar was 
known as Jahar to friends on campus.
Student Zach Bettencourt said he discussed the bombing with Dzhokhar at the gym.
"You hear about this kind of thing happening in Iraq and Afghanistan but not 
here," Bettencourt said.
Dzhokhar responded: "Yeah tragedies happen man, like these things happen around 
the world. It's crazy."
Less than 48 hours after the 
bombing, Harry Danso was making small talk with Dzhokhar at their dorm. 
"He was just in the hallway, said 'Hi' and walked past me. He just acted 
regular. Gave me a regular smile, like usual."
He also went to a party at the dorm, a fellow student told The Boston Globe. It 
was attended by friends who competed in intramural soccer.
"He was just relaxed," the student 
said, asking the paper not to publish her name. Also on Wednesday, 
authorities revealed that one and possibly both of Monday's deadly 
devices had been fashioned out of pressure cookers. A pressure cooker 
lid was found on a rooftop near the marathon finish line.
Meanwhile, Dzhokhar's older 
brother, Tamerlan, was reaching out to family members. He called two 
uncles on Thursday, seeking their forgiveness.
"He called me, confused," Ruslan 
Tsarni, who lives outside Washington, told CNN. In an earlier interview 
with USA Today, another uncle quoted Tamerlan as saying, " 'I love you 
and forgive me' ... I guess he knew what he had done."
Learn more about the brothers Tsarnaev 
More violence, and a breakthrough 
Thursday was a breakthrough day for investigators.
They already had made progress, 
finding clear images of the men with the backpacks and ball caps on a 
surveillance video. Intelligence had been developed on one suspect 
earlier in the week; images of the second suspect were isolated 
Wednesday, officials told CNN.
Jeff Bauman, who'd survived the 
bombing but lost both legs, regained consciousness at Boston Medical 
Center and gave them a lead. On a piece of paper, he wrote: "Bag, saw 
the guy, looked right at me."
Top level officials from the 
Justice Department, FBI, ATF, Department of Homeland Security, 
Massachusetts State Police and Boston Police Department debated whether 
they should go public with the images they had found.
By 5 p.m. Thursday, after several 
delayed news briefings, a task force of federal, state and city law 
enforcement officials released photographs of the man in the black cap 
and hoodie and the man in the white cap. They asked for the public's 
help in identifying them.
"We are processing all the digital 
photographic evidence we can," Agent Richard DesLauriers, who leads the 
FBI's Boston division, told reporters. He asked the public to keep 
submitting their photos to police, noting that investigators had "a huge amount 
of video evidence to process."
Later that evening, an image of one of the brothers was captured on 
surveillance video at a convenience 
store in Cambridge. Then, about 11 p.m., police learned that Sean 
Collier, a police officer at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 
had been ambushed and shot to death in his patrol car on the campus.
In the early hours of Friday, the 
pair allegedly carjacked a Mercedez-Benz SUV in Cambridge, forced the 
driver to withdraw cash at an ATM, then let him go at a gas station.
The driver called 911 and reported 
that he'd been held up at gunpoint by two men who said they were the 
marathon bombers. He also said he'd left his cell phone in the car.
Police were able to track the cell phone -- and the car -- to Watertown, just 
west of Boston.
Just before 1 a.m. Friday, a lone 
Watertown cop came upon the brothers, who were now driving two cars, 
police Chief Edward Deveau said. They were armed with guns, pipe bombs 
and other explosives. Both cars stopped and the brothers leaped out and 
opened fire before backup could arrive.
Other officers responded to the pinned-down officer's call for help. More than 
200 shots were fired in 5 to 10 minutes.
Deveau said the brothers tossed explosives at police, including a homemade 
pressure-cooker bomb.
The older brother, Tamerlan, walked straight toward the cops but ran out of 
ammunition. He'd been wounded. 
An officer tackled him and police were handcuffing him when Dzhokhar 
tried to escape in the Mercedes. He aimed the car at the officers, who 
dove out of the way, and he ran over his brother. The Mercedes dragged 
the older brother down the street as it sped away.
The driver continued to exchange gunfire with police, then jumped out of the 
SUV and ran into the darkness.
Authorities finally got names to go with the photos and videos when they 
scanned a fingerprint from the 
brother left behind, according to The New York Times. He was Tamerlan Tsarnaev, 
and he was pronounced dead at a hospital. He was wearing explosives and a 
triggering device.
Police also learned that the 
Russian government had asked the FBI to check out Tamerlan's connections to 
radical Islamic groups in 2011. Nothing had come of the 
investigation.
Boston woke up Friday morning and 
learned the names of both bombing suspects. The manhunt for Dzhokhar 
Tsarnaev lasted all day and shut down much of Boston as police asked 
everyone to stay indoors. Authorities searched door-to-door in 
Watertown.
Then, in the evening, the request 
was lifted and authorities got a tip: A Watertown man told police 
someone was hiding in his boat in the backyard, bleeding. It was their 
suspect, the Watertown police chief said.
By then, there were a couple 
thousand police officers at the scene. A thermal image photograph, 
released Saturday by state police, showed what authorities say was 
Dzhokhar Tsarnaev lying in the middle of the boat.
"We know you're in there. Come out with your hands up," police demanded over a 
bullhorn.
Officers spotted Dzhokhar poking 
through the tarp and used "flash-bangs," devices meant to stun people 
with a loud noise. They used a robot to pull the tarp off the boat and 
negotiated with Dzhokhar for about half an hour.
Police, who had no idea whether he 
had explosives with him, repeatedly told him to stand up and lift his 
shirt and he eventually complied.
"Once we saw that, we felt 
comfortable enough to send some officer tactical equipment to grab him 
and pull him away from the boat," Deveau said.
The Boston Police Department got the last word on Twitter: "CAPTURED!!! The 
hunt is over. The search is done. The terror is over. And justice has won. 
Suspect in custody."
A few minutes later, a more somber tweet followed as Boston heaved a sigh of 
relief:
"In our time of rejoicing, let us not forget the families of 
Martin Richard, Lingzi Ly, Krystle Campbell and Officer Sean Collier." 
CNN's Susan Candiotti, Brian Todd, Steve Goldberg, Melissa Gray and Rachel 
Streitfeld contributed to this report.
© 2013 Cable News Network.   Turner Broadcasting System, Inc.  All Rights 
Reserved. 
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