Authorities
warned people in Watertown not to leave their homes and not to answer
the door. During the night a university police officer was killed, a
transit police officer was wounded, and the suspects carjacked a vehicle
before leading police on a chase that ended with one suspect shot dead.
Police
said the suspect they were seeking was the man shown wearing a white cap
in surveillance pictures released on Thursday night which had been
taken shortly before Monday's explosions that killed three people and
wounded 176 at the finish of the Boston Marathon.
The
blasts triggered security scares across the United States and evoked
memories of the September 11, 2001 attacks. On Friday the authorities
effectively closed down Boston, halting transportation systems and
telling people to stay home as the hunt continued.
Officials
said as police had closed in on the two men overnight they attacked the
officers with explosives and gunfire before one of them was shot and
taken to a hospital, where he died.
"We
believe this to be a terrorist," said Boston Police Commissioner Ed
Davis of the suspect still at large. "We believe this to be a man who
has come here to kill people. We need to get him in custody."
The
dramatic events overnight followed the release on Thursday by the U.S.
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) of pictures and video of two
suspects seen wearing backpacks and baseball caps in the crowd minutes
before the bombs exploded.
About
five hours later, a university police officer was shot and killed on the
campus of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the Middlesex
County District Attorney said in a statement.
A short
time later, police received reports of a carjacking by two men who kept
their victim inside the car for about half an hour before releasing him,
the statement said.
Police
pursued that car to Watertown, where explosives were thrown from the car
at police and shots were exchanged, the statement said.
"During
the exchange of the gunfire, we believe that one of the suspects was
struck and ultimately taken into custody. A second suspect was able to
flee from that car and there is an active search going on at this point
in time," Colonel Timothy Alben, superintendent of the Massachusetts
State Police, told a news conference.
The
wounded suspect was taken to Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, where
he died, said Dr. Richard Wolfe, chief of emergency medicine.
"This was
a trauma arrest, multiple injuries, probably, we believe, a combination
of blast, potentially gunshot wounds," Wolfe told a news conference.
When asked how many gunshot wounds, he said: "Unable to count."
The blast
injuries may have been caused by "an explosive device, possibly
shrapnel, thermal injury. It was pretty much throughout the trunk. It
was multiple wounds," he said.
Inside
the 20-block search area, police performed street-by-street checks of
yards with full tactical gear, long rifles and full armor, a Reuters
photographer witnessed.
Massachusetts
Governor Deval Patrick suspended all public transportation service on
the Boston-area subway, bus and rail system as a precaution.
"People
that are at subway stations or at bus stops we are asking them to go
home, we do not want people congregating and waiting for the system to
come back on," said Kurt Schwartz, director of the Massachusetts
Emergency Management Agency.
Schwartz
also asked people in the Boston-area communities of Newton, Waltham,
Belmont, Cambridge and the Allston-Brighton to stay indoors and asked
businesses in those areas to remain closed pending further notice.
MIT said it canceled all classes on Friday after one of its police officers was killed.
U.S.
President Barack Obama was briefed overnight by a counterterrorism aide
on the Boston bombing investigation and manhunt, a White House official
said.
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