Second autopsy awaits Boston bombing suspect
But first, he will undergo a second "independent" autopsy demanded by his relatives, a family spokeswoman said.
Other hurdles remain.
His death certificate has
yet to be filed with the Boston city clerk, and there is no burial plot
yet, according to the funeral home holding the remains.
If no grave site is found
after the second autopsy, Peter Stefan, the owner of the funeral home,
plans to ask the government to find a grave.
Three cemeteries that
Stefan contacted said they feared reprisals, but the funeral home owner
said you can't pick and choose when it comes to a burial.
"This is what we do in a
civilized society, regardless of the circumstances," Stefan said. "As I
told some of them, at the immediate moment you may fear (reprisal), but
later on, when things calm down, people are going to resent you because
you didn't do it."
Tsarnaev died on April 19
after he and his brother shot a university police officer to death,
carjacked an SUV and hurled bombs at officers pursuing them, according
to authorities.
A few days earlier --
April 15 -- he and his younger brother, Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, allegedly
bombed the Boston Marathon, killing three and wounding more than 260.
Stefan read Tamerlan Tsarnaev 's death certificate to CNN over the phone Friday.
"Gunshot wounds of torso and extremities," the funeral home owner said. "Blunt trauma to head and torso."
Authorities have said his younger brother may have run him over as they resisted arrest days after the marathon attacks.
'Everyone deserves to be buried'
Tsarnaev's body remained
unclaimed until Thursday, when an uncle, who had previously publicly
condemned his alleged attacks, had a funeral parlor pick up the body.
The uncle, Maryland resident Ruslan Tsarni, had decried the alleged bombers as "losers" after the attacks.
Their parents in Dagestan have said they will not fly his body back to Russia for burial, spokeswoman Heda Saratova said.
CNN affiliate WCVB
reported that the hearse that picked up Tsarnaev's body ferried it to a
funeral home 30 miles away from Boston, near the Rhode Island state
line.
Residents of North
Attleboro, Massachusetts, took to the streets to boo Tsarnaev, when they
heard about the presence of the corpse in their town, The Sun Chronicle reported.
Others took to social
media to vent anger at the funeral home for accepting the body. It was
later transported to Stefan's funeral home, Graham Putnam & Mahoney
Funeral Parlors in Worcester.
n development's role in Boston attack
The marathon bombings
Authorities say the brothers carried out the Boston Marathon bombings using explosive devices made of pressure cookers.
Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, 19,
is being held at a federal Bureau of Prisons medical facility in Devens,
Massachusetts, charged with using a weapon of mass destruction, which
carries the death penalty.
He is being treated for
gunshot wounds to the head, neck, legs and hands that he received in the
shootout with police that led to his brother's death.
Investigators found
explosives residue in the apartment that the elder Tsarnaev shared with
his wife and young daughter, a source briefed on the investigation said
Friday.
It has turned up in at
least three places at the small apartment in Cambridge, Massachusetts,
the source said: the kitchen table, the kitchen sink and the bathtub.
Dzhokhar Tsarnaev has
said they built the bombs there, U.S. law enforcement officials briefed
on the progress of the investigation said.
Other target, a cover-up
The marathon was not the
original target, the officials said. The brothers had set their sights
on a suicide attack on the city's massive Independence Day celebration,
which draws about 500,000 people and is televised nationally.
But the bombs were ready
sooner than anticipated and a day or two before the Boston Marathon,
they changed their plans, the officials said.
They spoke on the condition that their names not be used because they were not authorized to discuss the matter with the media.
One key question
involves whether intelligence, law enforcement and homeland security
agencies could have done more in their investigation of Tamerlan
Tsarnaev in recent years before the attack and whether they shared
information effectively enough. An independent government review is
underway.
In an interview with
Univision published on its website on Saturday, President Barack Obama
said cooperation among agencies can always get better. But he again
defended U.S. efforts.
"I think we can continue
to improve and refine how we're engaging and countering terrorist
activity," Obama said. "I don't think it's fair to say though that law
enforcement dropped the ball."
It is very difficult to
prevent attacks when dealing with individuals who are self-radicalized
and not part of a massive conspiracy or network, he said about the
current belief of investigators looking at the origins of the Boston
bombing.
Tsarnaev's widow,
Katherine Russell, has remained largely out of view since her husband's
death, staying in her parents' Rhode Island home.
Her attorney, Amato DeLuca, says the 24-year-old knew nothing about plans to bomb the race, and reports of her husband's involvement came as an "absolute shock" to Russell and her family.
Three of Dzhokhar Tsarnaev's friends have been accused of covering for the bombing suspects.
Azamat Tazhayakov and
Dias Kadyrbayev were charged Wednesday with conspiring to discard
potentially incriminating items from Dzhokhar Tsarnaev's dorm room.
Robel Phillipos was charged with making false statements to
investigators.
The FBI is examining Dzhokhar Tsarnaev's laptop, two federal law enforcement officials told CNN.
Authorities have said
they believe the brothers acted alone, but are investigating whether
they could have learned from or have been aided by terror groups,
including groups overseas.
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