Tag Archives: Boston Marathon

How the Name “Mulugeta” Got into Social Media Frenzy

Tadias Magazine
By Tadias Staff

Updated: April 27, 2013

New York (TADIAS) – Prior to the massive manhunt across Boston last week that eventually zeroed in on the two Chechen-born brothers suspected in the Marathon bombings, there were some cringing moments for the Ethiopian community during the media’s now infamous frenzy when tweets begun to appear with the name “Mulugeta” apparently picked up from local police radio communications.

According to The Atlantic Magazine at 2:14am Eastern on Friday, April 19th, “an official on the police scanner said, ‘Last name: Mulugeta, M-U-L-U-G-E-T-A, M as in Mike, Mulugeta.’ And thus was born the newest suspect in the case: Mike Mulugeta. It doesn’t appear that Mulugeta, whoever he or she is, has a first name of Mike. And yet that name, ‘Mike Mulugeta,’ was about to become notorious.”

“A single tweet references Mulugeta at the time his name was said on the scanner. A Twitter user named Carcel Mousineau simply said, ‘Just read the name Mike Mulugeta on the scanner.’ It was retweeted exactly once. In the unofficial transcript of the scanner on Reddit, at least as it stands now, the reading of the name was recorded simply: ‘Police listed a name, unclear if related.'”

What came next was a rapidly unfolding of false news. “This is the Internet’s test of ‘be right, not first’ with the reporting of this story,” Greg Hughes, who had been closely following developments online, tweeted. “So far, people are doing a great job.” Then, as The Atlantic noted, at 2:43am he declared, “BPD [Boston Police Department] has identified the names: Suspect 1: Mike Mulugeta.”

Tadias became aware of the trending conversation on Twitter when another post from the user Whodini Bolero turned up later that morning:

“The information was spreading like crazy,” the report added, quoting Kevin Michael (@KallMeG), a cameraman for the Hartford, Connecticut CBS News affiliate, who tweeted, only seven minutes after Hughes’ announcement, that “BPD scanner has identified the names: Suspect 1 — Mike Mulugeta.” The unconfirmed identification was subsequently retweeted by several media professionals, including Andrew Kaczynski at BuzzFeed, reaching “far and wide.”

The Atlantic also highlights that last week’s “Misinformation Disaster” was not limited to Twitter and Facebook. Cable Television and wire services, such as CNN, Fox News and the Associated Press all wrongly reported two-days early that an arrest had been made, earning a rebuke from the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

Click here to read The Atlantic Magazine’s story.

Related:
UPDATE: Suspect Charged in Boston Bombing
The FBI Criticizes the News Media After Several Mistaken Reports of an Arrest (NYT)
Mistaken reports highlight dangers for media (Tampa Bay Times)
NBC’s Pete Williams: Media Hero of the Boston Bombing Coverage (The Atlantic)

Watch: Pete Williams Reports for NBC’s Nightly News

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Video: Boston bombing suspect finally in custody (NBC News)

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UPDATE: Suspect Charged in Boston Bombing

VOA News
Jim Malone

April 22, 2013

Nineteen-year-old Dzhokhar Tsarnaev now faces U.S. federal criminal charges in connection with last week’s bombings at the Boston Marathon. If convicted, Tsarnaev could face the death penalty.

One week after the two bombings that wreaked havoc near the finish line of the Boston Marathon, Dzhokhar Tsarnaev was formally charged in a Boston hospital room, where he remains in serious but stable condition.

A statement from U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder said Tsarnaev is charged with using and conspiring to use a weapon of mass destruction that resulted in death. A second charge of malicious destruction of property by an explosive device resulting in death also was filed. If he is found guilty of the federal charges, Tsarnaev might get the death penalty.

Investigators reportedly have been questioning Tsarnaev, and he has been responding in writing. He is suffering from a gunshot wound to his throat. Officials say it is not clear if the wound was self-inflicted or came in the shootout with police in the Boston suburb of Watertown last week.

Tsarnaev’s older brother Tamerlan died in that same shootout.

At the White House Monday, presidential spokesman Jay Carney said there is no doubt that Dzhokhar Tsarnaev eventually will face a trial in the civilian court system, and not through a military commission.

Images of Boston Bombing Suspects

“He will not be treated as an enemy combatant. We will prosecute this terrorist through our civilian system of justice. Under U.S. law, United States citizens cannot be tried in military commissions and it is important to remember that since 9-11 we have used the federal court system to convict and incarcerate hundreds of terrorists,” said Carney.

Some Republican members of Congress have urged the Obama administration to designate Tsarnaev an enemy combatant for the purposes of more easily questioning him about his motivation for the Boston bombing, and whether he and his brother had links with terrorist groups.

Senator Lindsay Graham, a Republican from South Carolina, spoke to reporters at the U.S. Capitol shortly after the criminal charges were announced.

“I hope that the administration will look long and hard at the evidence and keep on the table the ability to interrogate this suspect for intelligence gathering purposes about future attacks that we may face,” said Graham.

Boston Police Commissioner Ed Davis told NBC’s Today program that law enforcement officials are still trying to find out why the brothers allegedly carried out the bomb attacks last week.

“We are satisfied that the two main actors, the people who were committing the damage out there, have been either captured or killed. There is still an open question as to exactly what happened in this investigation, and there are enormous investigative resources being poured into that right now,” said Davis.

Experienced investigators say the authorities in Boston will try to learn all they can from Tsarnaev through a variety of techniques.

Vernon Herron is a retired major from the Maryland State Police, now with the Center for Health and Homeland Security at the University of Maryland.

“Everybody has certain triggers that will prompt them to give you information or not give you information,” he said. “I have always found it easier to get information from suspects when you didn’t go in heavy-handed and when you spoke with them in a calm voice and tried to build a relationship with them long before you started asking them incriminating questions.”

Bostonians took part in a moment of silence Monday to mark the one-week anniversary of the bombing attacks that killed three and wounded more than 180 others.



Related:
Marathon Bombing Suspect in Custody After Standoff in Watertown (The New York Times)

Watch:

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Boston Bombing Suspects Put Chechnya in Spotlight (National Geographic)


The two suspects in Monday’s Boston Marathon bombings are brothers of Chechen origin who grew up in Russia’s restive Caucasus region known for its history of ethnic and nationalist discontent. (Photo: AP )

By Anna Kordunsky

Published April 19, 2013

The two brothers suspected in the Boston Marathon bombings—one of whom is dead, the other provoking a massive manhunt across Boston on Friday—are Chechens who were raised in Dagestan and Kyrgyzstan before immigrating to the United States in 2002, according to news reports.

While nothing has yet been found linking brothers Tamerlan Tsarnaev, 26, who was killed by authorities, and 19-year-old Dzhokhar Tsarnaev to Chechen terrorist organizations, their ethnicity has once again directed attention to Russia’s Caucasus region. (Read “Chechnya: How did it come to this?” in National Geographic magazine.)

The area occupies Russia’s underbelly, situated between the Caspian and Black Seas, and has been a cauldron of ethnic and nationalist discontent for centuries.

Read more at National Geographic News.
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Related:
How the Name “Mulugeta” Got into Social Media Frenzy (TADIAS)

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Boston Marathon: Teyba Erkesso Wins Woman’s Race

Above: Teyba Erkesso of Ethiopia has won the 2010 Boston
Marathon. She was followed by Russian Tatyana Pushkareva,
and defending champion Salina Kosgei of Kenya.

Tadias Magazine
Sports News

Updated: Tuesday, April 20, 2010

New York (Tadias) – Teyba Erkesso of Ethiopia has captured the grand prize at the 2010 Boston Marathon, finishing the women’s race in two hours, 26 minutes and 11 seconds. She was followed by Russia’s Tatyana Pushkareva three seconds later. Defending champion Salina Kosgei of Kenya came in third, crossing the finish line at 2:28:35.

In the men’s race, Kenya’s Robert Kiprono Cheruiyot won the title in record time, completing the course in two hours, five minutes and 52 seconds. Tekeste Kedebe of Ethiopia finished second at 2:07:23. He was followed by defending champion Deribe Merga, also from Ethiopia, who came in third at 2:08:39.

Erkesso and Cheruiyot will receive $150,000 each.

Video: Boston Marathon and other Headlines

Video: Teyba Erkesso Comments after Boston Marathon

Track and Field Videos on Flotrack

Here are the results courtesy of Boston Athletic Association:

Top Women Finishers-Open Race:

1. Teyba Erkesso (Ethiopia) 2:26:11
2. Tatyana Pushkareva (Russia) 2:26:14
3. Salina Kosgei (Kenya) 2:28:35
4. Waynishet Girma (Ethiopia) 2:28:36
5. Bruna Genovese (Italy) 2:29:12
6. Lidiya Grigoryeva (Russia) 2:30:31
7. Yurika Nakamura (Japan) 2:30:40
8. Weiwei Sun (China) 2:31:14
9. Nailya Yulamanova (Russia) 2:31:48
10. Albina Mayorova-Ivanova (Russia) 2:31:55

Top Men Finishers-Open Race:
1. Robert Cheruiyot (Kenya) 2:05:52
2. Tekeste Kebede (Ethiopia) 2:07:23
3. Deriba Merga (Ethiopia) 2:08:39
4. Ryan Hall (USA) 2:08:41
5. Mebrahtom Keflezighi (USA) 2:09:26
6. Gashaw Asfaw (Ethiopia) 2:10:53
7. John Komen (Kenya) 2:11:48
8. Moses Kigen Kipkosgei (Kenya) 2:12:04
9. Jason Lehmkuhle (USA) 2:12:24
10. Alejandro Suarez (Mexico) 2:12:33