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- Ex-FBI official: The bombings have "the hallmarks of both domestic and international" attacks
- FBI: At least one bomb was housed in a pressure cooker and contained "improvised fragmentation"
- Doctors find pellets, nail-like objects and carpenter-type nails in patients
- More than 100 of the 183 patients hospitalized have been released
(CNN) -- Within a day of the Oklahoma City bombing, officials had named their suspect: Timothy McVeigh. Within two days of the 9/11 attacks, investigators had zeroed in on al Qaeda as the perpetrator.
But as loved ones mourn the deaths of three people and dozens remain hospitalized from the dual bombings at the Boston Marathon, two questions continue to hound authorities: Who triggered the attack, and why?
Even for seasoned investigators, the theories run the gamut on whether Monday's attack was spawned domestically or from afar.
"All of the talking heads that discuss this incident and incidents like it, if your experience and your expertise is Middle East terrorism, it has the hallmarks of al Qaeda or a Middle East group. If your experience is domestic groups and bombings that have occurred here, it has the hallmarks of a domestic terrorist like Eric Rudolph in the 1996 Atlanta Summer Olympics bombings," former FBI Assistant Director Tom Fuentes said.
"I've been to both. I've run bomb scenes in Iraq and also in the U.S. It has the hallmarks of both domestic and international (attacks), and you can see either side of that."
While the answers remain uncertain, new information continues to surface.
The bombs
The two bombs, which went off within 12 seconds of each other, killed three people and wounded 183.
One was housed in a pressure cooker hidden inside a backpack, the FBI said in a Joint Intelligence Bulletin. The device also had fragments that may have included nails, BBs, and ball bearings, the agency said.
The second bomb was also housed in a metal container, but there's not enough evidence to determine whether it was also in a pressure cooker, the agency said.
The U.S. government has warned federal agencies in the past that pressure cookers -- airtight pots used to quickly cook or preserve foods -- have been packed with explosives and shrapnel and detonated with blasting camps.
Photos obtained by CNN showed the remains of a pressure cooker found at the scene, along with a shredded black backpack and what appear to be metal pellets or ball bearings.
Scraps of at least one pressure cooker, nails and nylon bags found at the scene are being sent to the FBI's national laboratory in Virginia, where technicians will try to reconstruct the devices, the federal agent leading the investigation said Tuesday.
The pieces recovered so far suggest the devices could carry 6 liters (1.5 gallons) of liquid apiece, a Boston law enforcement source said. The parts found also include a partial circuit board, which would be used to detonate a device.
A law enforcement official said Monday's bombs were likely detonated by timers. But the FBI said the detonating system and method of initiation for the devices are still unknown.
Clues from inside the hospital
As medical personnel scrambled to treat the wounded, they found disturbing pieces of evidence that suggest the terrorist wanted to maximize the suffering.
Dr. George Velmahos, head of trauma care at Massachusetts General Hospital, said his team found items such as pellets and nail-like objects inside patients' bodies.
"They are numerous. There are people who have 10, 20, 30, 40 of them in their body, or more," Velmahos said.
While most of the patients treated at Brigham and Women's Hospital were injured by "ordinary debris," three were wounded by "perfectly round objects" that were very uniform, consistent and metallic, the hospital's chair of emergency medicine said.
Dr. Ron Walls also said one patient had more than 12 carpenter-type nails.
"There is no question some of these objects were implanted in the device for the purpose of being exploded forward," Walls said.
The hunt for the attacker
Authorities have received more than 2,000 tips and a mass of digital photos and video clips and asked the public for help finding who planted them at two points on Boylston Street.
"Someone knows who did this," said Rick DesLauriers, the special agent in charge of the FBI's Boston office. "Cooperation from the community will play a crucial role in this investigation."
DesLauriers asked people to report anyone who talked about targeting Monday's race or showed interest in explosives. He urged anyone who might have heard the sounds of explosions in remote areas -- possibly by someone testing a bomb -- or saw someone carrying "an unusually heavy, dark-colored bag" around the time of the attack to come forward.
Exactly who wanted to cause mass destruction -- and whether they acted alone or as part of a group -- remain a giant mystery.
"We really don't know if it's a foreign or domestic threat," said Rep. Michael McCaul, R-Texas, chairman of the House Homeland Security Commitee. "We don't know whether this was a homegrown terrorist or part of a wider conspiracy."