boston marathon explosion
Ailina Tsarnaeva, the sister of Boston Marathon bombing suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, was released from a Boston courtroom after appearing briefly in a counterfeiting investigation on Wednesday.
The defense team representing Boston Marathon bombing suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev asked a US District Court judge to order federal prosecutors to give them more time to make their case against the death penalty.
More information has been revealed about how brothers Tamerlan and Dzhokhar Tsarnaev may have went from living normal American lives to bombing the Boston Marathon in April. Along with Al Qaeda and Jihadist doctrine, their self-radicalization may have also been stirred by an anti-U.S. government conspiracy theorist suffering from brain damage.
The FBI has declared that their officials could not have done anything more to prevent the Boston Marathon bombings in April, rejecting criticism that it could have monitored one of the suspects more closely before the attack occurred.
The Massachusetts State Police photographer who leaked photos of the accused Boston bomber's surrender was stripped of his gun and badge on Wednesday and placed on restricted "desk duty" pending a full investigation of the case.
Today accused Boston Marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev will make his first public appearance since his arrest in April during a scheduled hearing in federal court in Boston.
After attending a closed door briefing on Tuesday, members of the Senate Intelligence Committee learned that Russia warned the U.S. about Tamerlan Tsarnaev, the now deceased Boston Marathon bombing suspect, on "multiple" occasions.
The bombing of the Boston Marathon was the first successful terrorist attack on U.S. soil since 9/11, and American seem to be getting tougher.
Massachusetts police are hoping that the Boston Marathon explosions can lead to new clues in a triple homicide case that took place in the city of Waltham on September 11, 2011.
President Obama has decided the surviving suspect in the Boston Marathon bombings will be tried in federal courts, and not as an enemy combatant, as many congressional Republicans advocate.
The killing and capture of the two brothers responsible for the bombings of the Boston Marathon last week were made possible through a combination of new technologies and old-fashioned detective work.
Because the surviving suspect responsible for the Boston bombings is unable to speak, authorities say he has been communicating through writing.
Although social media is a useful tool when it comes to breaking down the borders of transparency, there comes a time when too much info - like data about an investigation - can jeopardize the safety of others. This is one of those times.
While the father of the two suspects accused of executing the Boston Marathon Bombing maintains that his sons are innocence, other members of the family have chosen not to rush to the men's defense and are instead calling the men out for the "shame" that they have caused their family.
Leave it up to Comedy Central's late night hosts, Jon Stewart and Stephen Coldbert, to find a way to make Americans laugh as the country copes with the devastation caused by the Boston Marathon bombing that injured 183 people and killed 3 others.