Third email on Delhi blast traced to Moscow
September 9th, 2011 - 9:07 pm ICT by IANSNew Delhi, Sep 9 (IANS) An email Friday claiming responsibility for the Delhi High Court bombing has been traced to Moscow, but there is a possibility it could have been sent from a proxy server with the address in the Russian capital, sources said Friday.
This is the third email in as many days claiming responsibility for the deadly attack that killed 13 people outside the court complex in the heart of the capital.
“The third email sent to Delhi Police has been traced to Moscow. The NIA (National Investigation Agency) is not sure whether it was sent by proxy server or it is from Moscow indeed,” a source told IANS.
A proxy server keeps the computers behind it anonymous, mainly for security reasons and to circumvent regional restrictions.
- Flurry of email claims confound Delhi blast case - Sep 10, 2011
- HuJI claims responsibility for Delhi blast - Sep 07, 2011
- Fourth email on Delhi blast surfaces - Sep 09, 2011
- Kishtwar student sent to NIA custody till Oct 7 - Sep 23, 2011
- Delhi blast: Investigators still grappling for clues, toll 13 - Sep 08, 2011
- Kishtwar student a conspirator in Delhi blast, says NIA - Sep 22, 2011
- No breakthrough in Delhi terror attack a week later - Sep 13, 2011
- Delhi blast: NIA looks for Kishtwar suspect's brother - Oct 20, 2011
- NIA raids suspects' residences in Jammu, Kishtwar - Oct 19, 2011
- Chidambaram holds meeting with top security officials - Sep 08, 2011
- Delhi blast: Email suspects being quizzed - Sep 11, 2011
- Indian Mujahideen hideouts raided for leads in Mumbai blasts probe - Jul 15, 2011
- NIA releases one of three arrested youth - Sep 24, 2011
- Delhi High Court blast: Charges filed against six (Lead) - Mar 13, 2012
- Two days' judicial custody for Delhi blast suspect - Oct 05, 2011
Tags: capital sources, claiming responsibility, deadly attack, delhi high court, delhi police, email, heart, investigation agency, moscow, national investigation, New Delhi, proxy server, russian capital, security reasons