Thursday, 3 April 2014

Boston Bomber Manhunt Uncovered Policing ‘Blunder Lines’: Study


The enormous manhunt for the performers of previous year's Boston Marathon bomb attack uncovered some "blunder lines" in managing law enforcement personals at the federal, state and local levels, according to a study announced  on Thursday.

Emergency responders chasing to the crime scene without waiting for the orders might save lives by nursing to the injured, but during the confused chase to catch the suspects a few days later, they also jeopardy being shot by police, according to the Harvard University report.

The hairiest episode after the bombing, which killed three people and wounded 264, began three days shortly when the two racial Chechen brothers, 26-year-old Tamerlan Tsarnaev, and his younger brother Dzhokhar, who was only 20 years old, shot and murdered a university police officer in a failed attempt to steal his gun and escape the city.

The shooting encouraged hundreds of local police officers, as well as law enforcement officials who had traveled around from other towns to help with the investigation, to chase to Watertown, Massachusetts, where the suspects traded gunshot with police.

Police officers bounded the suspects, inserting the police at the high risk of shooting one another. The study was based on the dialogues with some of hundred law enforcement officers and other public officials who took part in the response.

Despite troubles during the manhunt incident, the report establish that law enforcement officials worked mutually and smoothly on the day of the bomb explosion, confirmation by the fact that most of the wounded, many of whom lost their legs, survived despite extensive loss of blood.


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