Investigators have found female DNA on at least one of the bombs used
 in the Boston Marathon attacks, though they haven't determined whose 
DNA it is or whether that means a woman helped the two suspects carry 
out the attacks, according to U.S. officials briefed on the probe.
The officials familiar with the case cautioned that there could be 
multiple explanations for why the DNA of someone other than the two 
bombing suspects—Tamerlan Tsarnaev and his younger brother, 
Dzhokhar—could have been found on remnants of the exploded devices. The 
genetic material could have come, for example, from a store clerk who 
handled materials used in the bombs or a stray hair that ended up in the
 bomb.
On Monday, Federal Bureau of Investigation agents were seen leaving 
the Rhode Island home of the parents of Katherine Russell, the widow of 
Tamerlan Tsarnaev. The elder brother died after a shootout with police 
four days after the April 15 bombings.
Ms. Russell has been staying with her parents since the bombings, and
 FBI agents have been seen posted outside the home since her late 
husband was identified as one of the bombers. Her lawyer has said she is
 "doing everything she can to assist with the investigation."
One official familiar with the case said agents went to the house 
Monday to collect a DNA sample from Ms. Russell, the culmination of days
 of negotiations. FBI officials also have been negotiating with Ms. 
Russell's attorney in recent days to get fuller access to question her, 
the officials familiar with the case said. The officials briefed on the 
investigation said the DNA request was needed to determine whether it 
matched the DNA found on the bomb remnants. 
Investigators have no evidence that any of the associates had 
knowledge of the bombing plot, and they believe that if anyone helped to
 dispose of evidence—a point that remains uncertain—it may have been 
unwitting, according to officials briefed on the investigation. 

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