February 11, 2009 7:14 PM
- Text
NYPD Reveals London Bomb Details
(CBS/AP)
The London suicide bombers cooked up their explosives using mundane items like hydrogen peroxide, suggesting that "these terrorists went to a hardware store or some beauty supply store" for ingredients, according to New York City police.
Details from the July 7 London bombings emerged Wednesday at an unusually wide-ranging briefing given by the New York Police Department to city business leaders.
The briefing — based partly on information obtained by NYPD detectives who were dispatched to London to monitor the investigation — was part of a program designed to encourage more vigilance by private security at large hotels, Wall Street firms, storage facilities and other companies.
Meanwhile in London, thousands of police officers patrolled London's streets and sprawling subway system Thursday, a month after four suicide bombers killed 52 people. A court ordered the first person charged in connection with the failed July 21 bomb attacks to be jailed until his next hearing.
Officials stressed there was no specific intelligence of a third attack, but undercover police were mingling with passengers, and officers armed with automatic rifles and pistols patrolled stations and streets. Police helicopters hovered above while traffic was heavier than normal.
Police chiefs said the massive security operation, involving some 6,000 officers, was intended to reassure the public four weeks on from the deadly July 7 attacks on three subway trains and a central London bus, and the failed July 21 attacks that followed
In his briefing, New York Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly warned the materials and methods used in the London attack were easily adaptable to New York.
"Initially it was thought that perhaps the materials were high-end military explosives that were smuggled, but it turns out not to be the case," Kelly said. "It's more like these terrorists went to a hardware store or some beauty supply store."
As CBS' Charlie D'Agata reports, the explosives were made of everyday materials -- like hair bleach and citric acid. But once mixed, the compound degrades at room temperature, so commercial-grade refrigerators were used.
The three subway bombs were probably set off cell-phone timers.
The NYPD officials said investigators believe the bombers used a peroxide-based explosive called HMDT, or hexamethylene triperoxide diamine. HMDT can be made using ordinary ingredients like hydrogen peroxide (hair bleach), citric acid (a common food preservative) and heat tablets (sometimes used by the military for cooking).
Details from the July 7 London bombings emerged Wednesday at an unusually wide-ranging briefing given by the New York Police Department to city business leaders.
The briefing — based partly on information obtained by NYPD detectives who were dispatched to London to monitor the investigation — was part of a program designed to encourage more vigilance by private security at large hotels, Wall Street firms, storage facilities and other companies.
Meanwhile in London, thousands of police officers patrolled London's streets and sprawling subway system Thursday, a month after four suicide bombers killed 52 people. A court ordered the first person charged in connection with the failed July 21 bomb attacks to be jailed until his next hearing.
Officials stressed there was no specific intelligence of a third attack, but undercover police were mingling with passengers, and officers armed with automatic rifles and pistols patrolled stations and streets. Police helicopters hovered above while traffic was heavier than normal.
Police chiefs said the massive security operation, involving some 6,000 officers, was intended to reassure the public four weeks on from the deadly July 7 attacks on three subway trains and a central London bus, and the failed July 21 attacks that followed
In his briefing, New York Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly warned the materials and methods used in the London attack were easily adaptable to New York.
"Initially it was thought that perhaps the materials were high-end military explosives that were smuggled, but it turns out not to be the case," Kelly said. "It's more like these terrorists went to a hardware store or some beauty supply store."
As CBS' Charlie D'Agata reports, the explosives were made of everyday materials -- like hair bleach and citric acid. But once mixed, the compound degrades at room temperature, so commercial-grade refrigerators were used.
The three subway bombs were probably set off cell-phone timers.
The NYPD officials said investigators believe the bombers used a peroxide-based explosive called HMDT, or hexamethylene triperoxide diamine. HMDT can be made using ordinary ingredients like hydrogen peroxide (hair bleach), citric acid (a common food preservative) and heat tablets (sometimes used by the military for cooking).
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