Republican outrage is rising over the decision to read teenage Boston bombing suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev his Miranda rights just as he was beginning to open up about the blast that killed three and injured about 270 people.
Former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani said it was “ridiculous” that a judge stopped the questioning while the 19-year-old was talking to FBI agents.
And House Intelligence Committee Chairman Mike Rogers called the decision to intervene a “God-awful policy.”
Lawmakers are demanding to know why Tsarnaev, who has confessed to being involved in the planting of two bombs near the Boston Marathon finish line, was read his Miranda rights in the middle of his interrogation.
“That’s just mind-boggling,” Giuliani said in an interview with Fox News’ Greta Van Susteren.
“This guy is kind of telling you about how he’s coming to New York and do a bombing, a judge walks in and we cut off the questioning?” Giuliani said. “What are we, crazy?
More @ Newsmax
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Feds Search Landfill for Boston Suspect's Laptop
Investigators in white hazmat suits are searching a landfill for a
laptop tied to the accused Boston Marathon bombers, a potential lead
that emerged as a result of interviews with two men from Kazakhstan who
knew the terror suspects, law enforcement sources told ABC News.
Immigration officers arrested the two men, Dias Kadyrbayev, 19, and
Azamat Tazhayakov, 20, on Saturday on suspicion that they had violated
the terms of their student visas because they were no longer attending
classes. They are being detained on the administrative charges at the
Suffolk County (Mass.) House of Corrections.
The men lived in an apartment near the campus of University of
Massachusetts Dartmouth, where accused bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, 19, had
been enrolled as a student. Both Tsarnaev brothers were believed to
have visited the New Bedford apartment of Kadyrbayev and Tazhayakov
after the bombing, according to three law enforcement sources, who spoke
on the condition they not be named because they were discussing an
ongoing investigation. The police sources told ABC News they traced
calls and Russian language text messages from one of the bombing
suspect's cell phone to the Kazakhstani men.
More @ ABC
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