Court Releases Friend Of Boston Bomber On Bail

phillipos

Robel Phillipos has been freed on bail pending a later trial date, in the Boston Marathon bombing case where he’s standing trial for lying to FBI agents.

The teenager has been put under the custody of his mother and must wear a GPS bracelet, US Magistrate Judge Marianne Bowler ordered in federal court in Boston on Monday.

The $100,000 bail for the 19-year-old was secured by real estate put up by a third party, the judge said.

Phillipos, of Cambridge, Massachusetts, is accused of making false statements to FBI agents investigating the April 15 attack that killed three people and injured 264 near the marathon’s finish line. He was not charged with direct involvement in the attack.

Phillipos’ mother was “very emotional,” after the ruling, the teenager’s attorney, Derege Demissie, said.

About 60 people, including friends, family and a large contingent from the Boston Ethiopian community, appeared in the courthouse on Monday showing their support for Phillipos.

Defence lawyers argued he was not a flight risk, has no prior criminal history and can refute FBI allegations that he interfered with their investigation, court records show.

In affidavits of support filed with the court, Phillipos is described as a social worker’s caring son who read to kindergarten students.

Phillipos was last week charged by US authorities charged alongside two 19-year-old students from Kazakhstan with interfering with their investigation as a manhunt for suspects Tamerlan and Dzhokhar Tsarnaev was under way.