Penticton Herald

No terror charges in Edmonton attack

Suspect faces 11 charges, including attempted murder, with investigat­ion still ‘in its infancy’

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EDMONTON (CP) — Police have charged a Somali refugee who they say attacked an officer and ran down pedestrian­s with a truck — but are holding off on terrorism charges for now.

RCMP Supt. Stacey Talbot, with Alberta’s Integrated National Security Enforcemen­t Team, said the investigat­ion of Abdulahi Hasan Sharif is still “in its infancy.”

“The complexiti­es of a terrorism investigat­ion are vast,” Talbot said Monday. “We continue to collect and gather informatio­n.

“As the investigat­ion unfolds and further informatio­n is garnered, and if additional charges are supported, they will be pursued at that time.”

Sharif, 30, is to make his first appearance today in provincial court on 11 charges, including five counts of attempted murder. He has also been charged with dangerous driving, four counts of criminal flight causing bodily harm and possession of a weapon for a dangerous purpose.

Police raised the possibilit­y of terrorism charges on Sunday when revealing that Sharif had been investigat­ed two years earlier for espousing extremist views and was found to have an Islamic State flag in his car.

Edmonton police have said they believe the suspect acted alone and without conspirato­rs during the series of attacks, which began around 8:15 on Saturday night.

Edmonton police Insp. Carlos Cardoso was asked by reporters why authoritie­s did not broadcast the name and details of the suspect to the general public after the police officer was attacked, given the incident had the earmarks of a terrorist attack and was near a sporting event.

“We go on the informatio­n we have at the time,” said Cardoso. “At that time we had the area flooded. We had points set up and we knew very little about this individual.

“The events that transpired shortly thereafter happened that quickly so the opportunit­y to actually provide that duty to warn just wasn’t there at that time.

“There will certainly be a review after this to see if we could do things differentl­y, but I do believe what we have in place right now is working quite well.”

The officer is expected to make a full recovery, while two of the four pedestrian­s who were run down remain in hospital.

In Ottawa, Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale said Sharif crossed legally into Canada in 2012 at a regular border crossing and obtained refugee status at that time. He said nothing raised any red flags at the time.

On Sunday, RCMP assistant commission­er Marlin Degrand said the suspect was checked thoroughly in 2015 after police received a report that he may have been radicalize­d.

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