BOSTON - Investigators believe they have identified a suspect in the  Boston Marathon bombing from security video and an official statement  was expected later in the day, a U.S. law enforcement source said on  Wednesday.
However, no arrest had been made, three separate U.S. government and law enforcement sources told Reuters.
Police  may make an appeal to the public for more information at a news  conference scheduled for later on Wednesday, a U.S. government source  said.
Earlier, CNN reported that a suspect was in custody, citing  law enforcement sources. But then the network cited three sources who  said no one was under arrest after all.
The identification of a  possible suspect marked the most significant publicly disclosed break  since Monday's blast at the marathon finish line killed three people and  injured 176 others.
Investigators were also searching through  thousands of pieces of evidence from cell phone pictures to shrapnel  shards pulled from victims' legs.
Based on shards of metal,  fabric, wires and a battery recovered at the scene, the focus turned to  whoever may have made bombs in pressure cooker pots and taken them in  heavy black nylon bags to the finish line of the world-famous race  watched by crowds of spectators.
A stretch of Boston's Boylston  Street almost a mile long and blocks around it remained closed as  investigators searched for clues in the worst attack on U.S. soil since  the hijacked plane strikes of Sept. 11, 2001.
Cities across the  United States were on edge after Monday's blasts in Boston. Adding to  the nervousness was the announcement that mail containing a suspicious  substance addressed to a lawmaker and to President Barack Obama. The FBI  said, however, that agents had found no link the attack in Boston.
The  blasts at the finish line of Monday's race injured 176 people and  killed three: an 8-year old boy, Martin Richard, a 29-year-old woman,  Krystle Campbell and a Boston University graduate student who was a  Chinese citizen.
Boston University identified the student as Lu Lingzi.
No one has claimed responsibility for the attack.
"Whether  it's homegrown, or foreign, we just don't know yet. And so I'm not  going to contribute to any speculation on that," said U.S. Secretary of  State John Kerry, who until January was Massachusetts' senior senator.  "It's just hard to believe that a Patriots' Day holiday, which is  normally such time of festivities, turned into bloody mayhem." - Reuters