FBI interviewed Boston bombing suspect in 2011: source
By Mark Hosenball and Warren Strobel | Reuters
The FBI interviewed suspected Boston Marathon bomber Tamerlan Tsarnaev
in early 2011, it said in a statement late Friday, following a tip from
a foreign government that he was "a follower of radical Islam" and was
preparing to leave the United States to join underground organizations.
The FBI
said its interview two years ago of Tsarnaev and his family, along with
checks of travel records, Internet activity and personal associations,
"did not find any terrorism activity" at the time.
But the revelation is the first evidence that the
Tsarnaev family came to U.S. security officials' attention after they
emigrated to the United States about a decade ago, and it could raise
questions about whether the government missed potential warning signs
about the behavior of two brothers.
Tamerlan Tsarnaev, 26, died overnight in Boston in a shootout with police. His younger brother, Dzhokhar, 19, was taken into custody on Friday evening in the Boston suburb of Watertown after a dramatic, day-long manhunt, Boston police said.
The FBI statement did not disclose which foreign
government asked it for information about the brothers and their family.
But Tamerlan was widely reported to have made a trip to Russia last
year.
The brothers and their family were ethnic Chechens,
whose small republic's attempts at independence following the collapse
of the Soviet Union were brutally crushed by Moscow. Both brothers,
however, were born in the Central Asian state of Kyrgyzstan, the FBI
statement said, and Dzhokhar was a naturalized U.S. citizen.
The revelation that the elder Tsarnaev was on U.S. law
enforcement authorities' radar screens seemed likely to raise
uncomfortable questions for the Obama administration about whether it
could have done anything to detect and stop the plot.
"It's new information to me and it's very disturbing
that he's on the FBI radar screen," Rep. Michael McCaul, Texas
Republican and chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, said
on CNN late Friday.
It is not known when the Boston Marathon bombings were
planned, or whether there were clues that could have allowed authorities
to pre-empt it.
National security and law enforcement authorities said
on earlier Friday that they had not turned up any evidence that the
Tsarnaevs had contacts with al Qaeda or other militants overseas.
Rep. Peter King, New York Republican and member of the
House intelligence committee, said in a statement that there "was no
federal intelligence or chatter prior to the marathon bombings," a
reference to militant communications often picked up in advance of an
impending attack.
The U.S. officials said they were leaning toward the
theory that the bombings were motivated by Islamic extremism, although
that remained unproven.
WERE THE TSARNAEVS WORKING WITH OTHERS?
Violent plots involving a single individual or small
groups who self-radicalize and have minimal dealings with other
militants can be extremely difficult to detect in advance, according to
U.S. counterterrorism officials and private experts.
The revelation about the FBI contacts with the elder
Tsarnaev came as U.S. officials told Reuters that investigators are
scouring government data banks to determine if spy and police agencies
missed potential clues that might have alerted them to the two brothers.
Another top
priority for investigators is to determine whether the brothers had any
confederates either inside the United States
or overseas, one U.S. official said. This official and others spoke on
condition of anonymity to discuss an ongoing investigation.
Three people were
taken into custody for questioning in New Bedford, Massachusetts, police
said on Friday. Two men and a woman are being questioned by the FBI "on
the assumption there is an affiliation with" Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, Lieutenant Robert Richard of the New Bedford Police said.
One official said the possibility that the U.S.
government had information that should have raised questions about the
Tsarnaev brothers before the attack could not be ruled out. Other
officials said they were unaware that such material had turned up.
In several recent cases, U.S. intelligence and law
enforcement agencies failed to put together clues that, in hindsight,
might have led them to pre-empt a plot.
In 2009, U.S. Army Maj. Nidal Hassan
killed 13 people and wounded another 32 at Fort Hood, Texas. Prior to
the shooting spree, Hassan had email contacts with Anwar al-Awlaki, the
U.S.-born cleric and leader of al Qaida's affiliate in Yemen who was
later killed in a U.S. drone strike.
U.S. authorities had investigated Hassan's emails, but concluded they posed no threat of violence.
The father of Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab,
the so-called "underwear bomber" who tried to bring down a U.S.
jetliner over Detroit on Christmas Day 2009, reported suspicions about
his son's activities to the U.S. Embassy in Nigeria. But Abdulmutallab's
U.S. visa was never revoked.
A report by the Senate intelligence committee heavily
criticized U.S. intelligence agencies for failing to act on available
information in that case.
But Brian Jenkins, a
respected terrorism expert at the RAND Corp., dismissed the idea that
the Boston bombings represented an intelligence failure.
People will inevitably ask, "did we miss something in
intelligence?" said Jenkins, speaking before the news of the 2011 FBI
interview with Tamerlan Tsarnaev become public.
"Some people will label it an 'intelligence failure.'
But that's bple have come to expect 100 percent security," he
said.
(Additional reporting by Patrick Temple-West; Editing by Paul Simao and Stacey Joyce)
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