The FBI on Friday removed a computer from the New Jersey home of a sister of the Boston Marathon bombing suspects. Police said she was cooperating with the investigation and was "heartbroken, surprised and upset," though she told reporters she wasn't sure the accusations against her brothers were true.

Wst New York, NJ home of Ailina Tsarnaev, sister of Boston Marathon suspects
Home of Ailina Tsarnaev in West New York, NJ. Tsarnaev is sister of Boston Marathon suspects (David Matthau, Townsquare Media NJ)
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The woman, identified by local police as Ailina Tsarnaeva, told federal agents she had not been in contact with her brothers for years, according to Police Director Michael Indri.

"The main concern was to confirm that there was no contact made one way or the other, and I'm confident that the FBI has confirmed that," he said.

The woman's three-story brick building, across the Hudson River from New York City, remained cordoned off as federal agents searched the home and left with a computer and other electronics.

Early in the day, she spoke through a barely open door to News12 New Jersey and The Star-Ledger, telling them she was sorry for the families that lost loved ones "the same way I lost my loved one."

"I'm hurt for everyone that's been hurt," she told the TV station and newspaper.

Her brother Tamerlan Tsarnaev, 26, was killed overnight in a shootout with police outside Boston. Her younger brother remains at large.

"He was a great person," the woman said of her dead brother. "I thought I knew him. I never would have expected that from him. He is a kind and loving man. The cops took his life away just the same way he took others' lives away, if that's even true. At the end of the day, no one knows the truth."

"I have no idea what got into them," she said.

Indri said the woman was cooperating with the FBI.

"She's heartbroken, surprised and upset like we all are," he said.

A woman who described herself as a friend of Ailina described a different relationship between the woman and the elder brother.

Vicki Colon, of Passaic, said the woman feared him because "he used to beat her."

Colon said she met the two brothers during a visit to Massachusetts a couple years ago. She said the younger brother was very quiet.

The sister last spoke to Colon on April 6, Colon's birthday. Colon said she saw a Facebook posting Thursday night that led her to believe the woman may not have known her brothers had been identified as suspects.

"It just said, `God is great, I love my family,' basically," Colon said.

 

(Copyright 2013 by The Associated Press.  All Rights Reserved.)

 

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