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UPDATE: Terror at Boston Marathon leaves 3 dead, 144 wounded as witnesses describe horror

An injured man is loaded into an ambulance on Monday, April 15, after two bombs went off near the finish line of the fabled Boston Marathon. Photo: CNN
Emergency crews deal with the aftermath of the bomb at the finish of the Boston Marathon (Tyler Wakstein)
Emergency crews deal with the aftermath of the bomb at the finish of the Boston Marathon (Tyler Wakstein)
Medical responders run an injured man past the finish line the 2013 Boston Marathon following an explosion in Boston, Monday, April 15, 2013. Two explosions shattered the euphoria of the Boston Marathon finish line on Monday, sending authorities out on the course to carry off the injured while the stragglers were rerouted away from the smoking site of the blasts. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)
Medical responders run an injured man past the finish line the 2013 Boston Marathon following an explosion in Boston, Monday, April 15, 2013. Two explosions shattered the euphoria of the Boston Marathon finish line on Monday, sending authorities out on the course to carry off the injured while the stragglers were rerouted away from the smoking site of the blasts. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)
A person who was injured in an explosion near the finish line of the 117th Boston Marathon is taken away from the scene in a wheelchair. Photo: Boston Globe, Getty Images
A person who was injured in an explosion near the finish line of the 117th Boston Marathon is taken away from the scene in a wheelchair. Photo: Boston Globe, Getty Images
Two explosions went off near the finish line of the 117th Boston Marathon on April 15, 2013. Photo: Boston Globe
Two explosions went off near the finish line of the 117th Boston Marathon on April 15, 2013. Photo: Boston Globe
A person who was injured in an explosion near the finish line of the 117th Boston Marathon is taken away from the scene on a stretcher. Photo: Boston Globe, Getty Images
A person who was injured in an explosion near the finish line of the 117th Boston Marathon is taken away from the scene on a stretcher. Photo: Boston Globe, Getty Images
Victims lay on the sidewalk as emergency personnel respond to the scene of the first explosion near the finish line of the Boston Marathon, April 15, 2013. (Photo by John Tlumacki/The Boston Globe via Getty Images) Photo: Boston Globe, Wire
Victims lay on the sidewalk as emergency personnel respond to the scene of the first explosion near the finish line of the Boston Marathon, April 15, 2013. (Photo by John Tlumacki/The Boston Globe via Getty Images) Photo: Boston Globe, Wire
A man comforts a victim on the sidewalk at the scene of the first explosion near the finish line of the 117th Boston Marathon. (Photo by John Tlumacki/The Boston Globe via Getty Images) Photo: Boston Globe, Wire
A man comforts a victim on the sidewalk at the scene of the first explosion near the finish line of the 117th Boston Marathon. (Photo by John Tlumacki/The Boston Globe via Getty Images) Photo: Boston Globe, Wire
A victim of the first explosion is helped on the sidewalk of Boylston Street, after two explosions went off near the finish line of the 117th Boston Marathon. (Photo by John Tlumacki/The Boston Globe via Getty Images) Photo: Boston Globe, Wire
A victim of the first explosion is helped on the sidewalk of Boylston Street, after two explosions went off near the finish line of the 117th Boston Marathon. (Photo by John Tlumacki/The Boston Globe via Getty Images) Photo: Boston Globe, Wire
(CNN) -- Investigators are pleading for help in hunting down whoever triggered a pair of bombings that left a gruesome scene at the Boston Marathon.

The blasts, which killed an 8-year-old boy and two others, marked a grotesque end to what should have been a celebration of triumph.

One man's legs were instantly blown off, yet he kept trying to stand up.

Exhausted marathoners had to muscle the energy to flee the bloody scene.

And more than 140 people were hospitalized, some in critical condition.

"No piece of information or detail is too small," the FBI Boston Division said, asking the public for any information or images that might provide clues.

While authorities search for answers, many are at a loss to explain why anyone would target the annual event that celebrates thousands of runners from around the world.

A stunning attack

Both blasts happened in quick succession, near the row of international flags that led up to the finish line. The impact was so powerful, it whipped the limp flags straight out, as if they were caught in a hurricane.

It also knocked 78-year-old runner Bill Iffrig to the ground.

"I was just approaching the last straightaway to the finish line, and I had a good day and was feeling really good, and I got down to within about 15 feet of the finishing apron and just tremendous explosion, sounded like a bomb went off right next to me," Iffrig said.

"The shock waves just hit my whole body and my legs just started jittering around. I knew I was going down," he said.

Iffrig was not seriously injured. But trails of blood, severed arms and legs and other body parts littered the scene nearby.

At least 144 people were hospitalized, with at least 17 in critical condition and 25 in serious condition, officials said. At least eight of the patients are children.

A terrorism expert briefed on the investigation said doctors are "pulling ball bearings out of people in the emergency room," suggesting the bombs were designed to propel shrapnel.

But Dr. Ron Walls of Brigham and Women's Hospital, which received 31 patients, said the debris found in some patients' wounds did not appear to be from ball bearings.

"Everything we saw was sort of ordinary ambient material that could have been propelled by the blast but was not added to the device," Walls said. "It was not the kind of things that would be added to a device to make it more injurious than it otherwise would be."

At Massachusetts General Hospital, several patients suffered from injuries to lower limbs that will require "serial operations" in the coming days, trauma surgeon Peter Fagenholz said Monday night.

He said the most serious wounds "have been combined, complex lower injuries that involve blood vessels, bone and tissue."

Numerous patients had to have limbs amputated, Fagenholz said.

The hunt for clues

Investigators don't know who was behind the attack, or whether it was spawned domestically or from afar. But federal authorities are classifying it as an act of terrorism.

Federal and local investigators -- including bomb technicians -- searched an apartment in nearby Revere, the city's fire department posted on Facebook early Tuesday.

But authorities have not officially linked the search to the marathon bombings.

A federal law enforcement official said both bombs were small, and initial tests showed no C-4 or other high-grade explosive material, suggesting that the packages used in the attack were crude explosive devices.

The explosions went off near the finish line about 4 hours and 9 minutes into the race, within a 10-minute window of the average finish time for the marathon.

But the fact that the blasts took place near the end of the race "seems to indicate this was not geared toward maximum damage," said a former federal law enforcement official who now works in the intelligence community.

"It may speak volumes about the (level of) planning that went into this," the source said. "It raises questions ... why didn't the bombs go off when the crowd was packed in like sardines when the winners were crossing the finish line? It could mean the people behind it couldn't get access to the area when they originally intended."

Officials have no suspect in custody, but many people are being questioned, Boston Police Commissioner Ed Davis said.

Investigators warned police to be on the lookout for a "darker-skinned or black male" with a possible foreign accent in connection with the attack, according to a law enforcement advisory obtained by CNN. The man was seen with a black backpack and sweatshirt and was trying to get into a restricted area about five minutes before the first explosion, the lookout notice states.

Davis said authorities found at least one other explosive device that they were dismantling.

But Rep. Bill Keating, D-Massachusetts, said two undetonated devices were found.

One was discovered at a hotel on Boylston Street near the bomb site, and another was found at an undisclosed location, said Keating, a member of the House Homeland Security Committee. He called the bombing a "sophisticated, coordinated, planned attack."

Any unexploded devices could provide a treasure trove of information such as fingerprints and indications of the bomb maker's design, said the former federal law enforcement official.

Late Monday night, authorities said they were still getting reports about suspicious packages, but some may be abandoned belongings left by fleeing spectators.

Davis said that while no new devices had been found, he is "not prepared to say we're at ease at this point in time."

'Just like going back' to Iraq

Nurses Stephen Segatore and Jim Asaiante were stationed near the finish line, expecting to treat the usual ailments from runners -- cramps and dehydration.

Suddenly, they found themselves in a battlefield, with blood and debris everywhere.

"For me, it was just like going back to being in Iraq in 2006-2007," said Asaiante, an Army captain who served an 18-month tour.

"I heard the first IED, and I know there's never one. The bad guys always set up two or three" improvised explosive devices, he said.

From celebration to carnage

The plumes of smoke and images of bloodied victims running down streets also triggered haunting memories of the terrorist attacks of 9/11.

Tami Hughes had just crossed the finish line and was looking for her husband when she heard a deafening explosion.

"I didn't know if it was a small aircraft going into the building," said Hughes, who was in the bustling financial district during the 9/11 attacks.

"I turned around and immediately saw the whitish-brownish smoke billowing up four or five stories and I couldn't believe that, you know, could it be a bomb? And I stared at it and about five or seven seconds later, when the second one went off, I knew immediately that it was something coordinated or organized."

Never the same again

The Boston Marathon is the world's oldest annual marathon, dating back to 1897.

It's a tradition that not only symbolizes the arrival of spring in Boston, and it also marks Patriots Day, which commemorates the day of the opening battle of the Revolutionary War.

Each year, more than 20,000 pound the pavement through the winding streets of Boston as thousands of spectators cheer them on.

After Monday's tragedy, some wondered whether the spectacle would ever happen again.

"The Boston Marathon has endured two world wars and many other things," said Fred Treseler, who has helped train more than 3,000 athletes for the race.

"I am quite sure there will be a Boston Marathon next year. But for certain, the Boston Marathon has been changed forever."

See previous story posted April 15, 2013:

Boston Marathon explosions: two dead, 64 injured as 'bombs' hit race finish line

By Philip Sherwell, & Jon Swaine in New York, and agencies

(The Telegraph)- At least two people have died and dozens are believed to have been wounded when two huge explosions detonated near the finishing line of the Boston Marathon, and a third device exploded at the JFK Presidential Library nearby.

Boston police said two had died in the bomb blasts and up to 64 people had been wounded.

Witnesses said that some of the injured had lost limbs. Victims with horrific injuries were carried to the medical tent that was set up for runners; others were pushed in wheelchairs on hand if competitors collapsed.

Pools of blood stained the pavements as the two blasts ripped through the area within about 30 seconds each other near the city’s central Copley Square. They caused panic and terror in the crowds massed to watch one of the world’s biggest marathons.

Spectators, runners and race organisers fled in tears after they were told to evacuate the area immediately amid fears of further blasts. One woman was heard shouting: “Where are my children?"

Police deployed bomb squad teams and bomb-sniffing dogs as they searched for explosive devices. Some witnesses said that the first explosion seemed to come from a building.

An apparent third explosion also took place at the John F Kennedy Presidential Library in Boston, some three miles from the finish line of the marathon. No one was believed to have been injured in that blast.

The scale of the double explosion, the popularity of the event and the symbolism of the date – Patriot’s Day, a festive New England public holiday – prompted immediate fears of a terrorism attack.

In a statement on its Facebook page, the Boston Marathon termed the blasts as "bombs". Two high-ranking law enforcement officials told Reuters the blasts had been caused by bombs.

Law enforcement officials told the NBC network that they believed that at least one blast was the result of a home-made bomb. Some witnesses described ball-bearing injuries, a further indicator that a bomb was responsible.

A senior US intelligence official said two more explosive devices have been found near the scene. The official said the new devices were being dismantled, at least one with a water cannon.

Paul Browne, New York police deputy commissioner, said that the department was deploying counter-terrorism vehicles around landmarks in Manhattan, including hotels and tunnels, in response to the explosions.

Barack Obama, the president, was notified of the explosions by his national security staff. Vice President Joe Biden was in a conference call as the news broke and said to reporters: "Apparently there has been a bombing. I don’t know any of the details of what caused it, who did it. I don't think it exists yet. But our prayers are with those people in Boston who suffered injury."

Shortly after the explosions, Secret Service shut down Pennsylvania Avenue outside the White House, cordoning off the area with yellow police tape. Several Secret Service patrol cars also blocked off the entry points to the road.

The White House was not on lockdown and tourists and other onlookers were still able to be in the park across the street from the executive mansion.

The race winners had finished more than an hour earlier, but runners were still streaming across the finishing line in Boston at the time of the explosions.

One photograph posted to Twitter appeared to show the moment of the explosion, with runners still racing towards it.

Dramatic video footage showed an explosion along the side of the route, the orange of the blast followed by smoke billowing upwards. One runner keeled over, others dashed across the road, covering their heads in their hands.

"There was an explosion, police, fire and EMS are on the scene. We have no indication of how many people are injured," a spokesman for the Boston Police Department said.

"I was expecting my husband any minute. I don't know what this building is ... it just blew. Just a big bomb, a loud boom, and then glass everywhere,” said Cherie Falgoust whose husband was running in the race. “Something hit my head. I don't know what it was. I just ducked."

Laura McLean, a competitor, said she heard two explosions. "There are people who are really, really bloody," she said.

A cook from a restaurant in the area said he used his apron to try and bandage a woman who lost a leg. A spectator said that a severed leg flew past his face.

At least 10 victims had limbs blown off or required amputations, a doctor at Massachusetts General hospital told Fox News.

A list of competitors on the Boston Marathon website showed hundreds of British runners were expected to line up for the race.

A Foreign Office spokesman said: "We are aware of the incident and we are trying to gather information."

The Boston Marathon has been held on Patriots Day, the third Monday of April, since 1897. The event, which starts in Hopkinton, Massachusetts and ends Boston’s Copley Square, attracts an estimated half-million spectators and some 20,000 participants every year.

It is one of the world’s most prestigious marathons, with stringent entry requirements for competitors.

In Britain, police said they were reviewing security for the London marathon, scheduled to be run on Sunday.

Thousands of people compete in the London Marathon every year, thronging the city’s streets. London is also considered a top target for international terrorists.

The London race’s chief executive, Nick Bitel, expressed shock and sadness about the situation in Boston, saying “it is a very sad day for athletics and for our friends in marathon running.”

6 Responses to “UPDATE: Terror at Boston Marathon leaves 3 dead, 144 wounded as witnesses describe horror”

  • ire (15/04/2013, 18:03) Like (4) Dislike (0) Reply
    This is really a sad incident and should not be taken lightly. AMERICA be alert. Our prayers with the victims' families, friends and relatives and a speedy recovery to the injured n hurt.
  • October man (15/04/2013, 19:09) Like (0) Dislike (21) Reply
    oh no why dem aint leave Obama country
  • mAN uP (15/04/2013, 19:19) Like (6) Dislike (19) Reply
    My prayers are with those who are injured.
    • Just saying.... (15/04/2013, 19:34) Like (1) Dislike (0) Reply
      .. EIGHT YEAR OLD .. JUST CONFIRMED TO BE ONE OF THE DEAD...
    • dog (16/04/2013, 23:31) Like (0) Dislike (0) Reply
      I am disgusted by those who would dislike this comment. it is all a tragedy...
  • Vance (15/04/2013, 21:54) Like (1) Dislike (0) Reply
    It hurts when it hits home


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