Times Square bomber asks why device did not detonate
WHILE sequestered in a New York hotel room, the Times Square bomb suspect revealed he had thought about targeting other landmarks and asked investigators why the bomb he built failed to go off, people familiar with the probe said on Wednesday.
Faisal Shahzad said he considered attacking Grand Central Terminal, Rockefeller Center in midtown Manhattan, the World Financial Center near ground zero and Sikorsky Inc - a defense contractor with an office in his Connecticut hometown - before deciding to abandon a sports utility vehicle rigged with a homemade bomb in Times Square on May 1, said a law enforcement official.
A person familiar with the case said on Wednesday that during more than two weeks of questioning, the Pakistani-American suspect also expressed surprise that the device - a mishmash of fireworks, gasoline canisters, propane tanks and fertilizer - did not detonate. The suspect said he thought the fireworks would trigger a chain-reaction that would rupture the tanks and create a deadly fireball, the person said.
Shahzad, who authorities say has claimed he received explosives training in Pakistan, even asked interrogators to explain why the device failed.
Shahzad left the vehicle on West 45th Street on a spring Saturday evening amid hundreds of people at the tourist haven, prosecutors said. The attempted bombing prompted a massive police response, but no one was hurt.
Experts said the bomb had been poorly constructed with a nest of wires, battery-operated alarm clocks and heavy bags of fertilizer that couldn't explode.
There was no immediate response on Wednesday to a phone message left with Shahzad's attorney.
On Tuesday, Shahzad appeared in a United States court for the first time since his May 3 arrest. Prosecutors had refused to disclose his whereabouts prior to the hearing, but another official said on Wednesday he had been under guard at a Brooklyn hotel while he voluntarily answered investigators' questions.
All three people spoke on condition of anonymity because of the investigation had not been completed.
Shahzad, 30, was ordered held without bail on five felony charges including attempted use of weapons of mass destruction and attempted acts of terrorism transcending national boundaries, each of which carry potential penalties of life in prison.
The ex-budget analyst from Bridgeport, Connecticut, was captured while attempting to flee on a Dubai-bound plane at John F. Kennedy International Airport.
Since his arrest, Shahzad "has provided valuable intelligence from which further investigative action has been taken," the US attorney's office in Manhattan said on Tuesday.
Faisal Shahzad said he considered attacking Grand Central Terminal, Rockefeller Center in midtown Manhattan, the World Financial Center near ground zero and Sikorsky Inc - a defense contractor with an office in his Connecticut hometown - before deciding to abandon a sports utility vehicle rigged with a homemade bomb in Times Square on May 1, said a law enforcement official.
A person familiar with the case said on Wednesday that during more than two weeks of questioning, the Pakistani-American suspect also expressed surprise that the device - a mishmash of fireworks, gasoline canisters, propane tanks and fertilizer - did not detonate. The suspect said he thought the fireworks would trigger a chain-reaction that would rupture the tanks and create a deadly fireball, the person said.
Shahzad, who authorities say has claimed he received explosives training in Pakistan, even asked interrogators to explain why the device failed.
Shahzad left the vehicle on West 45th Street on a spring Saturday evening amid hundreds of people at the tourist haven, prosecutors said. The attempted bombing prompted a massive police response, but no one was hurt.
Experts said the bomb had been poorly constructed with a nest of wires, battery-operated alarm clocks and heavy bags of fertilizer that couldn't explode.
There was no immediate response on Wednesday to a phone message left with Shahzad's attorney.
On Tuesday, Shahzad appeared in a United States court for the first time since his May 3 arrest. Prosecutors had refused to disclose his whereabouts prior to the hearing, but another official said on Wednesday he had been under guard at a Brooklyn hotel while he voluntarily answered investigators' questions.
All three people spoke on condition of anonymity because of the investigation had not been completed.
Shahzad, 30, was ordered held without bail on five felony charges including attempted use of weapons of mass destruction and attempted acts of terrorism transcending national boundaries, each of which carry potential penalties of life in prison.
The ex-budget analyst from Bridgeport, Connecticut, was captured while attempting to flee on a Dubai-bound plane at John F. Kennedy International Airport.
Since his arrest, Shahzad "has provided valuable intelligence from which further investigative action has been taken," the US attorney's office in Manhattan said on Tuesday.
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