The five-term mayor, who died in 2014, had been hospitalized for for a broken leg when he heard about the bombings, and according to Davis, immediately went into action with the Governor and the President. Upon learning the identities of the bombers (Davis was instrumental to getting the photos released), and hearing that they had shot an MIT police officer and began throwing bombs at police, the two immediately butted heads over whether to lock down the city.
“There’s a bus stop close to where this incident happened,” Davis told Juliette Kayyem during this week’s edition of WBGH podcast Security Mom. “We think the guy is still in the area. If that bus starts to run that route, that guy
“The governor and the mayor went back and forth,” he continued. “The mayor was not in support of shutting the city down. But the governor made the call.”
In the end, Davis said that the lockdown was successful in that it forced Dzhokar, who was convicted on 30 counts and faces the death penalty, to give away his hiding spot in a Watertown boat. “The bottom line was we got a very good search done that basically flushed him out of a certain area into the boat,” he said.
Listen below via WGBH:
[h/t Boston.com]
[Image via screenshot]
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