BOSTON (AP) a Investigators in the Boston Marathon bombing pushed the search Thursday for more than one likely suspects discovered on video, while President Barack Obama paid a trip under heavy security to supply assurance to the city and a warning to those responsible for the attack: "We will see you." In Washington, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano said the FBI wants to consult with persons noticed in one or more little bit of video from the battle, but she said she's maybe not calling them suspects. She gave no details on what the video shows. A day early in the day, City Council President Stephen Murphy said researchers were trying to find a guy seen on a department store monitoring movie falling off a case close to the end line and then walking away. At an service honoring the three people killed and more than 180 wounded in Monday's double blasts, the president wanted to inspire a stricken town and comfort an unnerved nation, proclaiming that Boston "will run again." "We might be briefly pulled off our feet," Obama mentioned at the Roman Catholic Cathedral of the Holy Cross. "But we'll pick ourselves up. We'll carry on. We shall complete the race." The crowd applauded as Obama warned people who performed the attack: "Yes, we will find you. And, yes, you will face justice." There is huge police presence around the cathedral as citizens set up before dawn, hoping to obtain among the approximately 2,000 chairs inside. By 9 a.m., these were being turned away. On the list of thousands in line was 18-year-old Eli Philips. The school student was a convention volunteer and was carrying his volunteer hat. He said he was still surprised that "something that was euphoric went so bad." Ricky Hall of Cambridge turned up at 8 a.m. but was turned away from the line to have inside that was already stretching down at least two city blocks. "I stumbled on pay my respects to the victims," he said. He said he was also upset that somebody might desecrate the race, and maximum punishment was urged by him for the perpetrators. Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick said he discussed the stress that those responsible were still most importantly, but he said solving the situation will not "happen by magic." "It is going to occur by performing the careful work that really must be done in a comprehensive investigation," Patrick said. "That means going through the number of blocks at the blast scene square inch by square inch and following those paths and picking up items of data, and that's going to take some time." The weapons were crudely fashioned from regular home pressure cookers full of explosives, claws and ball bearings, researchers and others near the case said. Detectives suppose the units were then hidden in black duffel bags and left on the ground. As they certainly were searching for images of someone packing a black, heavy bag, a result. Investigators had appealed to the public to provide videos and pictures from the race finish line. One department store video "has established a suspect is seen losing a case near the level of the 2nd explosion and going off," Murphy said. He said he was briefed by Boston police. A few media outlets reported that the suspect have been identified from security movie taken at a & Taylor department store between your sites of the bomb explosions. Eight bombing patients remained in critical condition. Dr. Peter Burke, key of traumatization surgery at Boston Infirmary, said Thursday that one of the victims, a 5-year-old boy gets better and "is going to be OK." A boost can frequently compress a chest, bruising the lungs and heart, he said, introducing he's happy with the boy's development. A large number of patients have been released from hospitals, and officials at three hospitals that treated a few of the most seriously wounded said they expected each of their remaining individuals to survive. The explosions killed 8-year-old Martin Richard of Boston, 29-year-old Krystle Campbell of Medford, and Lu Lingzi, a University graduate student from China. Com Connected Press authors Jay Lindsay, Pat Eaton-Robb, Charlie LeBlanc, Bridget Murphy and Meghan Barr in Boston; Eileen Sullivan, Julie Rate and Lara Jakes in Washington; and Marilynn Marchione in Milwaukee led to the statement.
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