The body of one of the two men accused of pulling off the Boston
Marathon attack has been buried in rural Virginia -- a development that
local officials said caught them totally "off guard."
Tamerlan Tsarnaev's
remains were accepted "by an interfaith coalition in that community --
they responded to our calls," his uncle Ruslan Tsarni, of Maryland, told
CNN. The body was buried in an unmarked grave in a Muslim cemetery in
Doswell, Virginia, according to Tsarni.
"My tradition was that of
a Muslim, and I have that tradition of burial, and people helped me
with that," he said in a phone interview.
The death certificate
released by Massachusetts authorities indicates that Tsarnaev, whose
cause of death was listed as gunshot wounds and "blunt trauma to (his)
head and torso," was interred at Al-Barzakh Muslim Cemetery in Doswell,
which is about 25 minutes north of Richmond in a rural county of about
30,000 people.
While the news came out
Friday, Bukhari Abdel-Alim from the Islamic Funeral Services of Richmond
said Tsarnaev was actually buried the previous morning.
Speaking Friday from the
cemetery, which his organization owns, Abdel-Alim said there was "no
intention to ... make anybody angry," but that he and others felt
obligated to do what "God says to do" by putting Tsarnaev's "body back
into the earth."
"It's not a political
thing (but) he can't bury himself," said Abdel-Alim, adding his only
regret was that Tsarnaev "wasn't buried sooner." "...Whether he was
Christian, Muslim, Jewish, atheist, when you're dead you need to be
buried or taken care of, not just left in a funeral home."
Police in Worcester,
Massachusetts, had announced Thursday a "courageous and compassionate
individual came forward" to take Tsarnaev's remains out of Worcester,
where the body had been at a funeral home while Tsarni and officials
tried to determine what to do with it.
The chairman of the
Caroline County, Virginia, board of supervisors, Floyd W. Thomas, said
Friday afternoon he couldn't then confirm or deny that Tsarnaev is
buried in his county and that he hadn't seen the death certificate. As
he pointed out, "standard practice" is that local officials are not
notified that a burial is taking place.
According to Thomas and
county Sheriff Tony Lippa, neither they or any other officials in the
county knew about plans to bury Tsarnaev in that area. They were not
consulted, nor did they provide permission for such a burial to happen,
said Thomas.
At the least, he later
told CNN, county officials "would have preferred to be in a position to
... prepare for it a little better."
News of Tsarnaev's
burial in the county upset residents like Rhonda Richardson, who said
she thinks the body should have been taken to where his parents are in
southern Russia.
"He killed Americans on American soil, therefore he shouldn't be buried here," she told CNN.
At Friday's press
conference, Thomas acknowledged residents' concerns and said "I
understand how you feel, and I feel the same way." He said Caroline
County does not want to be associated with such a "terrible crime" that
took place more than 500 miles away, even though Tsarnaev has "no ties
to Caroline County."
"We do not wish to be the home of the remains of one of those perpetrators," he said.
Lippa, the county's
sheriff, said members of Virginia Attorney General Kenneth Cuccinelli's
office are also looking into the matter "to make sure all legalities
were being followed." But unless something wasn't done right -- in which
case, Thomas said, "we would look into undoing what happened" --
officials' hands are tied, he said.
"As long as everything was done legally, there's really very little that we can do," Thomas said.
Officials were also
concerned about securing the private cemetery against possible
trespassing protesters or those who might attempt to deface the grave
site.
While a sheriff's deputy
was stationed there Friday, officials said the county does not have
money set aside to provide security.
It's all a headache that Thomas, for one, never saw coming.
"Of all the localities in the United States, this was probably the last one we would have thought of," he said.
What would happen to the
body of the man who, along with his younger brother, Dzhokhar, was
accused of setting off two deadly explosions at the Boston Marathon on
April 15 had been a nearly month-long puzzle.
The body of Tamerlan
Tsarnaev, killed in a police pursuit days after the bombings, went
unclaimed for nearly two weeks. A funeral home in Worcester -- about 40
miles west of downtown Boston -- eventually accepted the remains.
But protesters in
Worcester made it clear they didn't want the body buried there, with one
holding a sign that read, "Bury the garbage in the landfill." And the
city manager of Cambridge, Massachusetts, where Tsarnaev lived, said he
would not allow Tsarnaev to be buried in the city, asserting that
possible protests and media coverage would disrupt the community.
It also appeared that
sending the body overseas was an unlikely option -- Tamerlan Tsarnaev's
parents in the Russian region of Dagestan said they would not fly his
body back to Russia for burial, citing passport problems, spokeswoman
Heda Saratova said.
In a press release
issued Friday, the Islamic Society of Greater Richmond said that a
"private Virginia citizen" and licensed counselor named Martha Mullen
"quietly coordinated efforts to resolve the problem of where to bury
Tsarnaev's remains."
That included e-mails
exchanged with representatives of the church she belonged to, as well as
local Muslim, Jewish and Hindu representatives. She contacted Worcester
police "after receiving an offer of a burial plot from the
administration of the Islamic Funeral Services of Virginia," the society
said.
Mullen also talked with her local pastor about the moral implications of her spearheading the effort.
"Jesus tells us, 'Love
your enemies,' " she said, according to the Islamic Society. "Not to
hate them, even after they are dead."
Abdel-Alim, who is vice
president of the Islamic Funeral Services of Virginia and attended
Thursday's burial, stressed Friday "there is no agreement with
(Tsarnaev's) actions, whatsover, in any form or fashion." At the same
time, he said "somebody needed to take responsibility."
"We were able to do so, and that's what we did," he said.
Tsarnaev's mother,
Zubeidat Tsarnaev, appeared confused by Thursday's announcement from
Worcester police. Speaking to CNN from Russia by phone Thursday evening,
Zubeidat Tsarnaev said she didn't know whether her son was buried or
where.
Tsarni -- who was the
main point of contact over what to do with Tamerlan Tsarnaev's remains,
according to Abdel-Alim -- said Friday that he called his nephew's
father Thursday "to give him an update, but I did not tell him where he
was buried."
"He didn't even ask me," Tsarni said.
Zubeidat Tsarnaev told
CNN in late April that her husband couldn't travel to the United States,
saying he was too ill. She said she eventually would be interested in
heading to the United States to see her younger son, despite pending
shoplifting charges against her in Massachusetts, where she once lived.
Tsarni said Friday he was "completely outraged that (the parents) have not been here for their children."
"My assumption is that they must be here, just to help with the investigation at least," Tsarni said.