Two U.S. lawmakers said that investigators have traveled to Dagestan, Russia, to learn more from close associates who knew the suspects' mother.
The outspoken mother shot back, saying that claims that she had ties to terrorist activity were 'lies and hypocrisy.'
Mother: Zubeidat Tsarnaeva (left, in a media
interview in Dagestan, Russia on Thursday) has claimed her sons were
framed for the Boston Marathon bombings (right, Zubeidat's mugshot for a
2012 shoplifting arrest)
Zubeidat Tsarnaeva, 45, has sparked outrage for her incendiary comments to the media and now officials say they are probing her possible involvement in the tragedy.
'[She (Zubeidat) is a person of interest that we're looking at to see if she helped radicalize her son, or had contacts with other people or other terrorist groups,' Rep. Dutch Ruppersberger, a Democrat from Maryland, who serves on the House Intelligence Committee, said on Friday.
Rep. Michael McCaul, the chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, said investigators are looking into whether the mother encouraged her son, Tamerlan, to embrace Islam extremism.
Outrage: The world has been shocked at Zubeidat
Tsarnaev's claims that the entire Boston Marathon attack was a setup
(the mother speaking to the UK's Channel 4 News in Russia this week)
Family: Investigators want to know about the
mother's influence over her sons (Zubeidat, center in an undated photo
holding a baby Tamerlan, with the boy's father Anzor (left) and uncle
Muhamad Suleimanov (right)
He added that a team of U.S. investigators had traveled to the Chechen region to interview sources who knew the family.
Unnamed officials have also reveled that the CIA asked for the Boston terror suspect and his mother to be added to a terrorist database in the fall of 2011, after the Russian government contacted the agency with concerns that both had become religious militants, according to officials briefed on the investigation.
Suspect: Both the CIA and the the FBI were warned about Tamerlan Tsarnaev by the Russian government
The FBI found no ties to terrorism.
The revelation that the FBI had also investigated Zubeidat Tsarnaeva and the CIA arranged for her to be added to the terrorism database deepened the mystery around the family.
Zubeidat Tsarnaeva to the news on Friday, slamming officials who are trying to implicate her.
'It's all lies and hypocrisy,' she told The Associated Press from Dagestan.
'I'm sick and tired of all this nonsense that they make up about me and my children. People know me as a regular person, and I've never been mixed up in any criminal intentions, especially any linked to terrorism.'
A former official of the Russian government told Congress on Friday that Cold War-era distrust may have made American officials less inclined to act on tips from Russian security services about one of the alleged Boston Marathon bombers
Andranik Migranyan, a former member of the President Council of the Russian Federation, told a House Foreign Affairs subcommittee on Friday that Russia and the United States have long viewed each other warily.
Because of that, he said, American officials, in his words, 'just didn't pay enough attention' when Russian agencies asked the FBI and CIA to look into bombing suspect Tamerlan Tsarnaev.
The Tsarnaevs are ethnic Chechens from southern Russia who immigrated to the Boston area in the past 11 years.
This new revelation shows that both major intelligence agencies were aware of his possible terrorist ties, as it has been reported that the Russians contacted the FBI about Tsarnaev earlier that year.
The FBI conducted an investigation and did not find he had any terror connections.
Tamerlan was listed on the U.S. government's highly classified central database of people it views as potential terrorists.
But the list is so vast that authorities did not automatically keep close tabs on him, sources close to the bombing investigation said on Tuesday.
The details come as it's revealed that Russian authorities had contacted the U.S. government repeatedly about Tsarnaev's suspected ties to radical Islam, according to senators briefed on the FBI investigation.
Following a closed briefing of the Senate Intelligence Committee on Tuesday, Sen. Richard Burr, a Republican representing North Carolina, said he believed that Russia alerted the United States about Tsarnaev in 'multiple contacts.'
Revealed: The name of one of the Boston Marathon
bombing suspects, Tamerlan Tsarnaev, was listed on the U.S.
government's highly classified central database of people it views as
potential terrorists
Prosecutors say the brothers, ethnic Chechens who had been living in the United States for more than a decade, planted two bombs that exploded near the finish line of the marathon on April 15.
Sources said Tamerlan Tsarnaev's details were entered into TIDE, a database maintained by the National Counterterrorism Center, because the FBI spoke to him in 2011 while investigating a Russian tip-off that he had become a follower of radical Islamists.
Warning: Officials investigated Tamerlan and his mother in 2011 but found no ties to terrorism
But the database, which holds more than half a million names, is only a repository of information on people who U.S. authorities see as known, suspected or potential terrorists from around the world.
Because of its huge size, U.S. investigators do not routinely monitor everyone registered there, said U.S. officials familiar with the database.
As of 2008, TIDE contained more than 540,000 names, although they represented about 450,000 actual people, because some of the entries are aliases or different name spellings for the same person.
Fewer than 5 per cent of the TIDE entries were U.S. citizens or legal residents, according to a description of the database on the NCTC website.
The TIDE database is one of many federal security databases set up after the September 11, 2001, attacks.
The database system has been criticized in the past for being too cumbersome, especially in light of an attempted attack on a plane in 2009. Intelligence and security agencies acknowledged in Congress that they had missed clues to the Detroit 'underpants bomber' Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab.
Officials said after the incident that he had been listed in the TIDE database.
Republican Senator Susan Collins said there were problems in sharing information ahead of the Boston bombings, too.
'This is troubling to me that this many years after the attacks on our country in 2001 that we still seem to have stovepipes that prevent information from being shared effectively,' she said.
Collins was speaking after the FBI gave a closed-door briefing to the Senate Intelligence Committee on Tuesday, but she did not elaborate.
Bombing suspects: Tsarnaev, 26, (right in black
hat) was killed in a police shootout early on April 19, while his
younger brother Dzhokhar, (left in white hat) was captured later that
day
Tsarnaev was not put on the 'no-fly' list that would have banned him from boarding an airplane in the United States. Neither was he named on the Selectee List, which would have required him to be given extra security screening at airports.
Another list, the Terrorist Screening Database, is a declassified version of the highly classified TIDE with fewer details about terrorist suspects. One source said Tsarnaev was on this list, too.
After being put in the TIDE system, his name was entered in another database, this one maintained by the Homeland Security Department's Customs and Border Protection bureau which is used to screen people crossing U.S. land borders and entering at airports or by sea.
Tsarnaev was flagged on that database when he left the United States for Russia in January 2012 but no alarm was raised, presumably because the FBI had not identified him as a threat after the interview.
Picking a fight: Tracy argues that the media and
'play actors' have made up the bombing that left three dead and more
than 260 injured
So he did not get secondary inspection on his re-entry at New York's JFK Airport. It was unclear exactly what the procedure was for such a downgrade.
Sean Joyce, deputy director of the FBI, defended the FBI's performance in the Boston bombings at two closed hearings in Congress on Tuesday.
While government agencies declined to publicly discuss how the watch list system handled Tsarnaev, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano disclosed some details at a separate, open hearing on immigration on Capitol Hill.
'Yes, the system pinged when he was leaving the United States. By the time he returned, all investigations - the matter had been closed,' Napolitano told the Senate Judiciary Committee on Tuesday.
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