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Champs-Elysees gunman had shot at French police before: officials

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pariS

The Champs-Elysees gunman who shot and killed a police officer just days before France’s presidenti­al election was detained in February for threatenin­g police but then freed, two officials told The Associated Press on Friday. He was also convicted in 2003 of attempted homicide in the shootings of two police officers.

The French government pulled out all the stops to protect Sunday’s vote as the attack deepened France’s political divide.

“Nothing must hamper this democratic moment, essential for our country,” Prime Minister Bernard Cazeneuve said after a high-level meeting Friday that reviewed the government’s already heightened security plans for the two-round presidenti­al vote that begins Sunday.

“Barbarity and cowardice struck Paris last night,” the prime minister declared, appealing for national unity and for people “not to succumb to fear.”

Investigat­ors believe at this stage that the gunman, 39-yearold Frenchman Karim Cheurfi, was alone in killing one police officer and wounding two others and a female German tourist on Thursday night, a French official who discussed details of the investigat­ion with the AP said

on condition of anonymity. The attack came less than 72 hours before the polls open.

Police shot and killed Cheurfi after he opened fire on a police van on Paris’ most famous boulevard. Investigat­ors found a pump-action shotgun and knives in his car. Cheurfi’s identity was confirmed from his fingerprin­ts.

Cheurfi had been detained toward the end of February after speaking threatenin­gly about police but was then released for lack of evidence, according to that French official and another,

who also spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to publicly discuss the probe.

The policeman killed Thursday was identified as Xavier Jugele by Flag!, a French associatio­n of LGBT police officers. Its president, Mickael Bucheron, told AP the slain officer would have celebrated his 38th birthday at the beginning of May.

Jugele was among the officers who responded to the gun-andbomb attack on Paris’ Bataclan concert hall on Nov. 13, 2015, among a wave of assaults in the

French capital that killed 130 people, he told People.com .

He was also there a year later when the venue reopened with a concert by Sting, saying how happy he was to be “here to defend our civic values.”

“This concert’s to celebrate life. To say ‘No’ to terrorists,” the media outlet quoted Jugele as saying.

The Islamic State group claimed responsibi­lity for Thursday’s attack in an unusually quick statement that sowed confusion by apparently misidentif­ying the gunman.

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