Fireworks executive rips page from Boston bombing playbook to trace NYC terror suspect
Briefly

Fireworks executive rips page from Boston bombing playbook to trace NYC terror suspect
"The company ran the Tsarnaev brothers' names through its internal database and discovered one of them had purchased fireworks at a New Hampshire store. The same process has since become routine when suspected terror cases mention fireworks or homemade explosive devices."
"At 12:46 p.m. on March 2, an 18-year-old named Emir Balat walked into a suburban Pennsylvania fireworks store and spent $6.89 on a 20-foot coil of green consumer safety fuse, Phantom Fireworks told Fox News Digital. Nothing about the purchase stood out at the time."
"Days later, after his name surfaced in connection with the alleged terror plot near the home of New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani, Phantom Fireworks' search produced a timestamp and a digital trail."
Phantom Fireworks has established a practice of searching its internal customer database whenever suspected terror cases involve fireworks or homemade explosive devices. This protocol began after the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing, when the company discovered that one of the Tsarnaev brothers had purchased fireworks at a New Hampshire store. The company applied this same process to a recent alleged ISIS-inspired terror plot in New York City, quickly identifying a transaction made by an 18-year-old suspect named Emir Balat who purchased safety fuse at a Pennsylvania store on March 2. Surveillance footage documented the purchase, and the company provided Fox News Digital with detailed transaction information including timestamps and registration details.
Read at Fox News
Unable to calculate read time
[
|
]