FYI


  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
  
  
 
>From dorm to prison cell: Bombing suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev's new digs
By   Julian Cummings. Susan Candiotti  and   Catherine E. Shoichet , CNN
April 29, 2013 -- Updated 0029 GMT (0829 HKT) CNN.com 
(CNN) -- Less than two weeks after he partied with classmates in a college 
dorm, Dzhokhar Tsarnaev now lives in drastically different surroundings.
The 19-year-old Boston 
Marathon bombing suspect is locked inside a 10-by-10-foot cell with a 
steel door, a slot for food and an observation window, a prison 
spokesman said Sunday.
Tsarnaev is able to speak and has been interacting with staff at the Federal 
Medical Center Devens, spokesman John Colautti said.
Medical professionals at the prison medical facility, which currently houses 
1,044 inmates, are making 
regular rounds to check on Tsarnaev, Colautti said, and Tsarnaev has 
spoken with staff there about managing his health.
The spokesman said he could not comment on whether Tsarnaev was speaking with 
investigators. 
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He referred questions on Tsarnaev's medical condition to the FBI, saying the 
facility does not assign 
medical condition rankings like civilian hospitals.
Tsarnaev is in an area of the facility where there's extra security, he said.
On Friday, authorities said 
Tsarnaev had been transferred from Boston's Beth Israel Deaconess 
Medical Center to the prison facility, which is about 40 miles west of 
the city.
Dzhokhar Tsarnaev has been charged 
with using a weapon of mass destruction for his alleged role in the 
April 15 bombings that killed three people and injured more than 260 
near the marathon's finish line.
Tsarnaev was captured April 19 after a nearly 24-hour manhunt. His brother, 
Tamerlan, died after a gun battle with police.
Dzhokhar Tsarnaev had what appeared to be gunshot wounds to his head, neck, 
legs and hand when he was 
captured, according to the criminal complaint accusing him in the 
marathon blasts.
Tsarnaev has been less talkative 
since authorities read him his Miranda rights three days after his 
capture. But the information the teenager gave investigators in two 
sessions of questioning has produced good leads, a U.S. law enforcement 
official said.
FBI: Search of dump tied to suspect ends 
Since the pair of blasts turned 
celebratory cheers into screams of horror at the Boston Marathon's 
finish line, investigators have kept working -- interviewing people and 
searching for evidence, even when it meant sifting through trash -- to 
find out why.
One of the most recent focuses of 
the probe was a landfill in New Bedford, Massachusetts, adjacent to the 
town where Tsarnaev attended school at the University of 
Massachusetts-Dartmouth.
Authorities finished combing the 
dump for clues that may shed light on the bloody attack on Friday, said 
FBI spokeswoman Laura Eimiller, who wouldn't say whether they found 
anything. 
Family, friends key in bombing case 
Boston suspect linked to 2011 murder? 
Signs of a radical Islamist
A law enforcement official with 
knowledge of the investigation had said investigators were looking for 
Tsarnaev's laptop computer.
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 of it also 
provided leads that prompted the search.
Eimiller, the FBI spokeswoman, said the investigation remains open, with 
interviews and the search for evidence continuing.
Officials: 2011 wiretap reveals talk of jihad 
In the past few days, Russian 
authorities turned over an intercepted conversation from 2011 between 
one of the Tsarnaev brothers in the United States and their mother in 
Dagestan, Russia, according to an official with knowledge of the 
investigation.
The wiretapped communication 
discussed jihad, but the conversation was vague, according to two U.S. 
officials. It's unclear why the Russians were eavesdropping on the 
mother or for how long.
One of the officials declined to 
say whether that wiretap information could have made a difference in 
ultimately uncovering a future attack on the United States.
Tom Fuentes, a CNN contributor and 
former FBI assistant director, said the FBI would have found that 
information helpful when the Russians asked U.S. investigators to look 
into Tamerlan Tsarnaev for a possible shift toward increasing Islamic 
extremism in 2011.
Family in Russia 
The brothers' mother, Zubeidat 
Tsarnaev, said Friday that she and her husband had left their home in 
Dagestan for another part of Russia.
Their 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 has said she will not 
return 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.
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.
Botched hijacking thwarts plans to head to New York 
Three days after the marathon 
attack, and hours after authorities released images of the two suspects, they 
spontaneously decided to go to New York's Times Square 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 a 
vehicle the night of April 18, the brothers fatally shot a campus police 
officer at MIT, police said.
The vehicle they subsequently 
hijacked, a Mercedes sport utility vehicle, 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.
CNN's Tim Lister, Ben Brumfield, 
Ashleigh Banfield, Paula Newton, Drew Griffin, Dave Alsup, Carol Cratty, Brian 
Todd and Barbara Starr contributed to this report.
© 2013 Cable News Network.   Turner Broadcasting System, Inc.  All Rights 
Reserved. 
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