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NEWS FROM THE UNITED STATES
New York
subway terror threat remains uncorroborated, concerns ease
NEW YORK- A reported plot to bomb
New York City's subways with remote-controlled explosives has not been
corroborated after days of investigation, law-enforcement officials
said Sunday amid an easing sense of concern. Interrogations of
suspects captured in Iraq last week after an informant's tip about
bomb-laden suitcases and baby carriages have yet to yield evidence the
plot was real, officials said. "The intelligence community has been
able to determine that there are very serious doubts about the
credibility of this specific threat," U.S. Homeland Security
Department spokesman Russ Knocke said. "This is after ongoing review
and analysis." Homeland Security officials have been skeptical about
the threat since it was publicly announced Thursday but officials who
were more assertive about the potential danger last week also appeared
to be softening their assessment. "I believe in the short term we'll
have a much better sense of whether or not this has, you know, real
substance to it," New York Police Commissioner Ray Kelly said on CNN's
Late Edition. A Homeland Security memo said the attack might have been
planned to take place on or around Sunday. The city has no immediate
plans to pull extra officers out of the subway system or reduce the
number of bag searches, said Kelly and New York Mayor Michael
Bloomberg. Police doubled the number of daily bag checks and sent
thousands of extra officers into the transit system, some in
plainclothes and many others in uniform. Bloomberg said he had no
regrets. "We've got to take every threat seriously and that is what we
are going to do," he said. The mayor said he planned to ride the
subway to Yankee Stadium on Sunday night for Game 4 of the American
League Divisional Series. The informant who prompted the plot
investigation has provided a mix of true and false information in past
investigations, Kelly said on CNN. Asked whether the informant had
passed a polygraph test, he replied: "That source was deemed to be,
yes, believing in the information that was put forward." The
commissioner said he remained confident the city acted properly. "This
threat was very, very specific. It had specific time, specific object
and modality." " So, you know, we had to do what we did," Kelly said.
The informant, who had spent time in Afghanistan, told U.S.
intelligence a group of men were plotting to attack subways with timed
or remotely detonated bombs in strollers and bags. U.S. forces in Iraq
arrested two plotters Thursday, prompting Bloomberg, Kelly and the
FBI's New York office to announce security was being increased in the
subways. A third suspect was arrested Friday.
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