Suspect: Boston bombing was payback for hits on Muslims
In the message, Dzhokhar Tsarnaev also proclaimed that an attack on one Muslim is an attack on all, and said he would not miss older brother Tamerlan Tsarnaev
-- who died after a firefight with police three days after the bombing
-- because he would soon be joining him, according to the source.
The writing on the inside
of the boat dovetails with what Dzhokhar, 19, told investigators
questioning him in a Boston hospital room shortly after his capture, the
source said.
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CNN has previously cited
U.S. officials in reporting that Dzhokhar said U.S. involvement in
Afghanistan and Iraq were motivating factors behind the April 15 attack,
which killed three people and wounded 275.
According to authorities,
the Tsarnaev brothers fashioned explosive devices from pressure cookers
and other materials and detonated them near the finish line of the
race.
Three days later,
authorities released their images to the public as suspects in the case.
Investigators believe they then killed MIT police Officer Sean Collier
and hijacked a car before battling authorities in a wild firefight on a
Watertown, Massachusetts, street.
Nearly 24 hours later,
police found Dzhokhar hiding in the boat after the owner called police
to report someone was inside of it.
Dzhokhar -- who suffered
gunshot wounds to the head, neck, legs and hands -- is being held a
federal Bureau of Prisons medical facility in Devens, Massachusetts. He
has been charged with using a weapon of mass destruction and could face
the death penalty if convicted.
Tamerlan was secretly
buried in a rural Virginia cemetery this month following protests from
Massachusetts residents and officials against burying him in that state.
Authorities have said
they believe the brothers acted alone, but are investigating whether
they could have learned from or been aided by terror groups, including
groups overseas.
Of particular interest
has been Tamerlan's 2012 trip to the semi-autonomous Russian republic of
Dagestan, home to numerous Islamic militant groups that have warred
against Moscow's rule.
Russian authorities
asked U.S. officials to investigate Tamerlan before the trip, saying
they believed he was becoming increasingly involved with radical Islam.
The FBI investigated, but found no evidence of extremist activity, FBI
Director Robert Mueller reiterated Thursday during a Senate
Appropriations Committee hearing.
Mueller said Russian
authorities told the FBI that Tamerlan and his mother appeared to be
"very religious" and that Tamerlan seemed "intent on returning and
perhaps participating in jihad, in Russia."
The FBI conducted a thorough investigation and found "no ties to terrorism," Mueller said.
U.S. officials learned
after the bombings that Russian officials had intercepted a 2011 phone
call between the suspect's mother, living in Dagestan, and one of her
sons, in which they reportedly had a vague conversation about jihad, a
law enforcement official told CNN earlier.
Some lawmakers,
particularly Republicans, have been critical of how law enforcement,
intelligence agencies and the administration of President Barack Obama
handled the Russian tip.
While Tamerlan and his
mother were added to a terror database following the FBI investigation,
Tamerlan was allowed to make his Russian trip in 2012, returning six
months later.
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