Detectives make identity kits of guides of metro suicide bombers
Recalling that the March 29 terrorist acts at the Moscow metro stations Lubyanka and Park Kultury killed 38 people and injured about 160 more people, he noted that "the exact number of injured people is under investigation," because "the information is still coming about people, who did not seek medical advice for some reasons in the first days after the blasts."
The detectives from the SKP, FSB and the Interior Ministry found out that the suicide bombers were Dagestani natives. Alongside, "the identity kits of the accomplices, who guided the suicide bombers to the crime scene were made, and all necessary measures to find and detain them are being taken," Markin noted.
All the terror victims were identified, their bodies were brought to the relatives shortly after the terrorist acts, the SKP spokesman said. After that social security bodies received the necessary information in order to pay compensations to the relatives of the metro blast victims. Forensic expertises of the injured people were held. The forensic expertise bureau assigned several experts and the separate premises at the SKP initiative to find out the degree of damaged done to their health.
Markin noted that "at the initial stage the detectives performed the whole range of urgent investigative actions and carried out several dozens of urgent forensic expertises, including DNA and blast expertises, as well as expertises of the video records confiscated from the metro cars." These measures made it possible to unmask the criminals involved in the crimes quickly and absolutely accurately, Kazinform cites Itar-Tass. See www.itar-tass.com for full version.