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If such a test was done, it would explain why Zazi might still need a fresh batch of chemicals to create new explosives, according to officials. It would also explain why investigators did not find explosive material when they searched his car and raided several apartments visited by Zazi after he arrived in New York. It is not clear whether Zazi or his associates made such purchases in New York. Authorities also haven't ruled out the possibility that Zazi became so spooked by surveillance when he arrived in New York that he or his associates surreptitiously dumped or hid any bombs or bomb components. Yet the lack of such concrete physical evidence as a backpack bomb has also forced investigators to do more painstaking and far-reaching work in the case. Two weeks ago, according to two law enforcement officials speaking on condition of anonymity, authorities brought about 10 people to federal offices in downtown Brooklyn for questioning. Some were questioned only briefly after authorities determined they knew Zazi only tangentially and were not involved in the alleged plot. Others were questioned for many hours, and at least one was administered a lie-detector test, the officials said. The questioning led investigators to narrow down their list of potential suspects in the case to what one official described as "a handful."
[Associated
Press;
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