Tag Archives: Boston Marathon Bombing

Frontline: “Top Secret America” After the Boston Bombings

Frontline, the WGBH/PBS investigative news show, will air “Top Secret America” After the Boston Bombings tonight on PBS stations. Local station listings can be found here.

Have the hundreds of billions of dollars spent since Sept. 11 on counterterrorism efforts in America made us safer?

In response to the recent terrorist bombings in Boston, FRONTLINE will take a definitive look at that timely, urgent question next Tuesday, April 30, in Top Secret America – 9/11 to the Boston Bombings, an updated version of our film which originally aired in September 2011. Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter Dana Priest traces the journey from 9/11 to the marathon bombings, examines efforts to improve information sharing among federal agencies tasked with keeping us safe and investigates the secret history of the 12-year battle against terrorism.

 

 

APNewsBreak: Russia caught bomb suspect on wiretap – Yahoo! News

Russian authorities withheld information from the FBI while asking for FBI assistance. If this is what’s been allowed into the public record, it’s not a big leap to think that Russian authorities, perhaps not the most trustworthy parties on the international stage, know (and knew) even more:

WASHINGTON AP — Russian authorities secretly recorded a telephone conversation in 2011 in which one of the Boston bombing suspects vaguel

Dzhokar Tsarnaev. Image via Voice of America.

Dzhokar Tsarnaev. Image via Voice of America.

y discussed jihad with his mother, officials said Saturday, days after the U.S. government finally received details about the call.In another conversation, the mother

of now-dead bombing suspect Tamerlan Tsarnaev was recorded talking to someone in southern Russia who is under FBI investigation in an unrelated case, officials said.The conversations are significant because, had they been revealed earlier, they might have been enough evidence for the FBI to initiate a more thorough investigation of the Tsarnaev

family.As it was, Russian authorities told the FBI only that they had concerns that Tamerlan and his mother were religious extremists. With no additional information, the FBI conducted a limited inquiry and closed the case in June 2011.Two years later, authorities say Tamerlan and his brother, Dzhohkar, detonated two homemade bombs near the finish line of the Boston Marathon, killing three and injuring more than 260. Tamerlan was killed in a police shootout and Dzhohkar is under arrest.In the past week, Russian authorities turned over to the United States information it had on Tamerlan and his mother, Zubeidat Tsarnaeva. The Tsarnaevs are ethnic Chechens who emigrated from southern Russia to the Boston area over the past 11 years.Even had the FBI received the information from the Russian wiretaps earlier, it’s not clear that the government could have prevented the attack.In early 2011, the Russian FSB internal security service intercepted a conversation between Tamerlan and his mother vaguely discussing jihad, according to U.S. officials who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the investigation with reporters.The two discussed the possibility of Tamerlan going to Palestine, but he told his mother he didn’t speak the language there, according to the officials, who reviewed the information Russia shared with the U.S.In a second call, Zubeidat Tsarnaeva spoke with a man in the Caucasus region of Russia who was under FBI investigation. Jacqueline Maguire, a spokeswoman for the FBI’s Washington Field Office, where that investigation was based, declined to comment.

via APNewsBreak: Russia caught bomb suspect on wiretap – Yahoo! News.