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Green said he plans to run again next year. "It went viral within about 30 minutes," he said. So for the second time, he posted it on Facebook, he said. They did say circulating the photo would help the case. Four days later, after an intense manhunt that shut down the Boston area, police captured one of the bombing suspects, 19-year-old Dzhokhar Tsarnaev. Green said the agents asked him not to discuss details about their conversations. One suggested it might be the best picture they had. "Within 30 minutes, I had spoken to five different agents all over the country," he said. Thursday, when authorities released two images of men in baseball caps that were suspects in the bombings, a friend of Green's called him to say the images looked strangely like one of the people in the street scene. They thanked him but didn't ask for more. He called the FBI that night to tell them he had a picture and video and that he had been at the scene that day. He had the photo, he said, so he posted it on Facebook after walking back to his hotel. (AP Photo/Massachusetts State Police, Sean Murphy) ( Boston. Green, CEO of 110% Play Harder, an athletic wear company specializing in compression gear, had run his first Boston Marathon and friends were texting and emailing trying to find out if he was OK. In this Friday, ApMassachusetts State Police photo, 19-year-old Boston Marathon bombing suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, with the red dot of a sniper's rifle laser sight on the top of his head, leans over a part of a boat where he had been hiding moments before his capture by law enforcement authorities in Watertown, Mass. He did shoot some video then police arrived to clear the scene. He tried to help but soon realized what was needed was beyond his ability. "It was beyond anything I've ever imagined looking at," he said. The first was about 100 yards from him, the second was closer, about 60 yards away. He was leaving a phone-charging station to look for friends and supporters near the finish when the explosions took place. a terrorist bombing that had killed two women and a beloved little boy. He took the picture after finishing the marathon. 12 An autopsy photo taken by a Boston police officer ( who then texted it to. The picture showed the man in the cap was not carrying a backpack, Green said. In the broad picture, the young man in the white ball cap with the number "3" on the side is a small image at the edge of a street scene full of startled faces, smoke, people running and standing.
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