Associated Press

UK Police Release 3 Manchester Bombing Suspects

Police trying to unmask a possible network around Abedi searched a property in Wigan, 20 miles northwest of Manchester, briefly evacuating neighbors as the bomb squad was called in.

British police say three of the 14 people arrested over the Manchester arena suicide bombing have been released without charge, and the investigation so far has found bomber Salman Abedi acted largely alone as he assembled his deadly device.

Russ Jackson, head of the police Northwest Counterterrorism Unit, said analysis of surveillance camera footage and other evidence had shown that "Abedi himself made most of the purchases of the core components" of the bomb.

"Many of his movements and actions have been carried out alone during the four days from him landing in the country (to) committing this awful attack," Jackson said.

The bombing killed 22 people and injured more than 100 after a show by American singer Ariana Grande at Manchester Arena. Grande announced Tuesday that she and other top stars — including Justin Bieber, Coldplay and Miley Cyrus — will return to the city to perform at a benefit concert on Sunday.

Meanwhile, police trying to unmask a possible network around Abedi searched a property in Wigan, 20 miles northwest of Manchester, briefly evacuating neighbors as the bomb squad was called in.

The house is one of more than a dozen searched in Manchester and beyond since the May 22 attack in an investigation that has involved 1,000 police officers.

Police say Abedi returned to Britain from Libya, his parents' homeland, on May 18. They are trying to re-create his movements before he detonated a bomb hidden in a knapsack at the concert and are trying to track a blue suitcase he was seen with in closed-circuit TV footage.

Jackson said police could not rule out the existence of a wider network around Abedi. Eleven men remain in custody on suspicion of terrorism offenses, but Jackson said three men — a 20 year old, a 24 year old and a 37 year old — were released Tuesday without charge.

The arrested suspects have not been identified or charged. Abedi's older brother Ismail is reported to be among them, and his father and younger brother have been detained in Libya.

Also Tuesday, London's Metropolitan Police said military backup for police, brought in after the bombing, was gradually being reduced now that the U.K.'s official threat level from terrorism had been lowered from "critical" to "severe."

Assistant Commissioner Mark Rowley said "military personnel will remain in readiness to support the police, should it be necessary."

Officials also said extra police staffing that had been added to protect public gatherings over the holiday weekend would be reduced.

The railway station next to Manchester Arena, which had been shut since the blast, reopened Tuesday, easing transport woes for residents.

Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham and Transport Secretary Chris Grayling were among those who laid wreaths at Victoria Station, which also suffered damage in the concert blast.

Burnham said the city had pulled together "through what has been our darkest week."

The return to a level of normalcy followed days of emotional tributes to the Manchester attack victims. Hundreds stood in quiet contemplation at St. Ann's Square, where a sea of cards, flowers and balloons has grown into an impromptu memorial site for those killed and injured in the blast.

British officials are under pressure to explain how Abedi was able to carry out his plot undetected. The government has said he was one of thousands of people peripherally on intelligence agencies' radar but was not a focus of surveillance.

Manchester's police chief said that Abedi had come to the attention of police for "relatively minor matters" including theft, receiving stolen goods and assault. But Chief Constable Ian Hopkins said Abedi had not been known to the government's counter-radicalization program known as Prevent.

Hopkins said he was not aware of what intelligence agencies knew about Abedi.

Associated Press writer Jill Lawless contributed to this story.

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