Boston Police Commissioner Ed Davis stood by the decision to shut down the city Friday as a manhunt ensued for one of the Boston bombing suspects.
“It was based solely on public safety. There were no pressures on any other issue. We were trying to limit the number of people killed or injured,” Davis said on Monday’s Morning Joe. “We had an active bomber running around the city, so we closed the city down.”
The lockdown, which mandated that more than a million people to stayed their homes for roughly 12 hours on Friday, was lifted shortly before the second suspect was apprehended. A Watertown resident, who left his home once the lockdown was lifted, spotted a bleeding person in his boat and alerted police, leading to the capture of 19-year-old suspect Dhokhar Tsarnaev.
“It was the right decision,” Davis said.
Some have criticized the lockdown, an unprecedented public safety ruling. Former New Mexico Democratic Sen. Jeff Bingaman told Politico he finds it “hard to imagine what could justify directing the entire population of the city to ‘shelter in place.’”








