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Three college friends of Boston Marathon bombing suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev are under arrest, suspected of removing items from his dorm room after the April 15 attack, sources said Wednesday.Two of them were detained April 20 on immigration charges and a third has now been taken into custody, sources said.They will be charged with lying to federal investigators for denying they took the items from ...
A 250-pound chunk of an airplane wing that is believed to be part of a 9/11 jetliner was hoisted out of an alley near the World Trade Center on Wednesday where it was found last week and taken into police custody.A dozen police officers worked for two hours using ropes and a hoist to lift the 5-foot-long piece of debris from the 18-inch-wide alley. They then wheeled it onto the street and loaded i...
Boston Police said Wednesday they have arrested three more people in the marathon bombing investigation, but gave no additional details.Sources told NBC News the three are college roommates or suitemates of accused bomber Dzokhar Tsarnaev and are suspected of removing items from his dorm at the University of Massachusetts-Dartmouth.There was no indication they had any prior knowledge of the bombin...
Boston Police said Wednesday they have arrested three more people in the marathon bombing investigation, but gave no additional details.Sources told NBC News the three are college roommates of accused bomber Dzokhar Tsarnaev and are suspected of removing items from his dorm at the University of Massachusetts-Dartmouth.There was no indication they had any prior knowledge of the bombing. Sources sai...
Boston Police said Wednesday they have arrested three more people in the marathon bombing investigation, but gave no additional details.Sources told NBC News the three are college students who are suspected of removing items from the dorm room of Dzokhar Tsarnaev, 19, who is charged with placing a bomb at the finish line of the April 15 race.It was unclear if the persons in custody had any knowled...
The Washington Post today published a special section—in print and on the web—about what some say is a resurgence of “Made in America” manufacturing.In the section’s anchor piece, Brad Plumer writes that some U.S. firms have “reshored” their manufacturing operations in the U.S. and that even some Chinese companies have located new plants here. He cites a narrowing wage gap between U.S. workers and their foreign counterparts, lower energy and transportations costs and automation as key drivers in moving manufacturing to the U.S.