Regina Leader-Post

Driver’s bomb didn’t fully detonate, says RCMP

TARGET UNKNOWN

- STEWART BELL

TORONTO • The bomb that ISIL supporter Aaron Driver tried to trigger inside a taxi when he was confronted by police on Aug. 10 never fully detonated, RCMP Deputy Commission­er Mike Cabana said in an interview.

Police now believe the blast that occurred was caused by the detonators and that the more powerful explosives never actually ignited, he said, although he added the forensic investigat­ion of the bomb was still underway.

“Primary indication­s are the only thing that exploded were the homemade detonators,” Cabana, the deputy commission­er for federal policing, told the National Post on Saturday. “The forensics are going to confirm that but that’s what it looks like.”

The explosives appear to use a formula common among terrorists that uses readily available materials. Police found a similar formula on his computer when they searched his home in Winnipeg on June 3, 2015. “I think so but I don’t think the forensics are complete on that, but I think essentiall­y he followed the same recipe.”

The target of his alleged attack remains unknown, he added. While Driver had told the taxi driver to take him to Citi Plaza in London, Ont., there is still no indication that was where he intended to detonate the bomb.

Cabana noted there was a train station near the mall. “Was he going there to hop on the train? We don’t know yet so we’re doing the forensics on the computer, hoping that we’re going to find something there but so far we have nothing,” he said.

Almost two weeks after Driver was killed by police in Strathroy, Ont., as he was allegedly about to conduct a bombing, the deputy commission­er’s responses show what investigat­ors now believe happened and what they have learned so far.

TORONTO• It was the black mask that did in Aaron Driver. If a police analyst hadn’t recognized his North Face balaclava, the RCMP might not have been able to get to the ISIL supporter’s home in time to stop his planned terrorist attack.

“I’ve seen that before,” the analyst said upon seeing the face mask worn by the ISIL supporter in a video in which he pledged allegiance to the terror group and talked about an imminent attack on Canadians, an RCMP official said on Saturday.

In an interview with the National Post, Deputy Commission­er Mike Cabana provided new details about how police raced the clock to identify Driver from a screen shot of a video the FBI had forwarded to the RCMP on the morning of Aug. 10.

“It wasn’t much to go by so they started looking at the picture and trying to compare but there was one analyst that actually recognized the individual, or at least the balaclava,” said Cabana, the deputy commission­er of federal policing. “He said ‘I’ve seen that before.’ ”

From an initial list of 11 possible suspects, police narrowed it down to five. But then an analyst found a news photo of Driver leaving court in Winnipeg wearing a black balaclava — just like the one worn by the man in the video.

“He said, ‘OK, that’s the one I remember.’ So then they started doing analysis of the eyes and the balaclava. Actually, it’s a North Face. So they were able to identify both of them are the same,” Cabana said.

Driver was living with his sister in Strathroy, Ont., under a terrorism peace bond imposed by a judge after the RCMP arrested him in Winnipeg in June 2015 over his online links with ISIL figures in several countries. But he was not under surveillan­ce.

The RCMP received the full video between 11 and 11:30 a.m. “By then we were pretty sure. It looked like it was him.” The audio portion was sent to investigat­ors in Manitoba who had spoken to Driver and they thought it was him.

“The moment that they narrowed down that they believed it could be Driver” surveillan­ce teams were sent to his residence and workplace, Cabana said. While they still didn’t have confirmati­on, “we didn’t want to take any chances.”

An Emergency Response Team was also dispatched. “There was a significan­t number of resources that were on their way to Strathroy.” At 4:18 p.m., Driver left the house and got into a cab. Confronted by police, he tried to detonate his bomb and a tactical team shot him dead.

He had likely intended the video to appear online following his attack. Cabana said the circumstan­ces concerning how the FBI obtained it were still under investigat­ion and he could not discuss that part of the case.

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