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‘Wire intercept’ basis of warning about Tsarnaev mother

Zubeidat Tsarnaeva was placed on a U.S. terror database a year and a half before the two bombs planted at the finish line of the Boston Marathon exploded after Russian officials shared concern over a recording.
/ Source: Weekends With Alex Witt

Zubeidat Tsarnaeva was placed on a U.S. terror database a year and a half before the two bombs planted at the finish line of the Boston Marathon exploded after Russian officials shared concern over a recording.

The mother of the Boston bombing suspects was placed on a U.S. terror database a year and a half before the two bombs planted at the finish line of the Boston Marathon exploded, counterterrorism officials confirmed with NBC News.

A “wire intercept” led Russian authorities to share a lead with American law enforcement, said California’s Democratic Rep. Adam Schiff, a member of the House Intelligence Committee, who was briefed on the case.

“We don’t have much more than that, and my guess is that the Russians do,” Schiff said Sunday on Weekends with Alex Witt. “If they were eavesdropping on the mother, or if  they were eavesdropping on some other suspect that the mother was in contact with, there had to be a reason why they went up on those people.”

Tsarnaeva, whose two sons, Tamerlan and Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, are suspected of carrying out the terror plot, was placed on the database by the Central Intelligence Agency in the fall of 2011. According to officials, the Russian government contacted the CIA with concerns that Tsarnaeva and her elder son Tamerlan—who was killed in a shootout with police during the manhunt following the bombing—had both become religious militants.

Officials tell NBC News that Tsarnaeva’s placement on the terror database does not mean she might be a threat. The mother of the suspected bombing duo denies having any links to terrorism, calling it “lies and hypocrisy,” the Associated Press reports.

The FBI had also investigated the now-deceased bombing suspect and his mother in response to the tip from the Russian government. Upon interviewing Tamerlan Tsarnaev and his family, the agency later determined that the 26-year-old Chechan posed no terrorist threat. FBI officials claim they did not hear back from Russian investigators when they asked for followup information on Tsarnaev.

Tsarnaeva is a naturalized U.S. citizen, and now lives in the southern Russian republic of Dagestan with the suspect’s father. Both parents appeared before the press and insisted that their sons are innocent. The bombings on April 15 left three dead and another 200 wounded.