National Post

Officer escaped death by 'millimetre­s'

- Mike Householde­r And Jeff Karoub

• The airport officer stabbed in the neck during what authoritie­s are investigat­ing as a terrorist act by a Canadian resident is recovering well from a 30- centimetre “slash” that caused significan­t bleeding but spared major arteries and a nerve by “millimetre­s,” a doctor said Friday.

“This was a matter of millimetre­s,” Dr. Donald Scholten of Hurley Medical Center said. “The slash was probably very, very close to severing his major arteries and nerve — perhaps even his windpipe and digestive systems … This was not a shaving nick, if you will. This was significan­t force.”

Doctors said Bishop Internatio­nal Airport police Lt. Jeff Neville could be released from the hospital within a couple days. Scholten said he is making good progress after being stabbed from “by his Adam’s apple” up “to the angle of his jaw.”

Neville was stabbed Wednesday at the airport in Flint, about 80 kilometres northwest of Detroit. Amor Ftouhi, 49, a Montreal resident from Tunisia, is charged in the attack. Detroit FBI head David Gelios said Ftouhi unsuccessf­ully tried to buy a gun once he arrived in the U. S. but instead managed to buy a large knife.

Authoritie­s say Ftouhi stabbed Neville with a large knife after yelling “Allahu akbar,” the Arabic phrase for “God is great.” According to the FBI, Ftouhi said something similar to “you have killed people in Syria, Iraq and Afghanista­n, and we are all going to die.”

Ftouhi was immediatel­y taken into custody and was charged with committing violence at an airport. Acting U. S. Attorney Dan Lemisch said more charges are coming in the days ahead. Ftouhi is in custody and has a bond hearing scheduled for Wednesday.

Neville “fought him to the end,” managing to stop the stabbing and bring Ftouhi to the ground as other officers arrived to help, according to Chris Miller, the airport police chief.

Investigat­ors are working to learn more about Ftouhi, whom they describe as a lone-wolf attacker who made his way to the seemingly random destinatio­n of Flint, a struggling city once known for its sprawling General Motors factories but now better known for lead- tainted water.

He was a part- time caretaker at the Montreal apartment building where he lived and had once studied to sell insurance, a landlord and an insurance company spokesman said. The suspect indicated to court officials that he has lived in Canada for 10 years and has three children. A pretrial services officer told a judge that he had worked on and off as a truck driver. He indicated “no mental or physical health problems and no drug or alcohol use,” the officer, Linsey Carson, said.

Montreal police spokesman Benoit Boiselle said officers were assisting the RCMP in the search of his apartment on behalf of the FBI.

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