Manchester Evening News

American among stabbing victims

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AN AMERICAN man was one of three people stabbed to death in a suspected terrorist attack in a Reading park.

A friend said Joe Ritchie-Bennett, originally from Philadelph­ia in Pennsylvan­ia, and history teacher James Furlong, 36, who also died in Saturday’s attack, were “great supporters” of the LGBT+ community.

“Their loss is a tragedy to so many people,” Martin Cooper, 36, who is chief executive of LGBT+ charity Reading Pride, told the PA news agency.

“They will be sorely missed by myself personally and many in the community.”

The 25-year-old suspect is understood to be Khairi Saadallah, a refugee of the civil war in Libya who briefly came to the attention of MI5 last year.

Saadallah, who is thought to have been released from prison earlier this month, was detained close to the scene at Forbury Gardens on Saturday night and arrested on suspicion of murder.

He was later re-arrested under Section 41 of the Terrorism Act, which gives powers to hold him without charge for up to 14 days. Police have said they are not looking for anyone else in connection with the attack.

A two-minute silence was held at the Holt School in Wokingham yesterday morning in memory of Mr Furlong.

More than 100 students, some holding hands, gathered at the school’s gates as a bell rang out to mark the start of the silence, while a flag in the school’s courtyard had been lowered to half-mast.

Former pupil Molly Collins, who left the school in 2017, told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “He was such a loved teacher.

“I can’t find anyone that ever had a bad word to say about him, and to hear that it was him is just so, so sad.”

The Philadelph­ia Inquirer newspaper reported that Mr Ritchie-Bennett was 39 and had moved to England from the US around 15 years ago. His brother, Robert Ritchie, a captain in the Philadelph­ia police force, told the paper: “We used to play together every day. We rode bikes together every day. Our family is heartbroke­n and beside ourselves.”

Mr Ritchie-Bennett’s father, also called Robert, said: “I absolutely love my son with all of my heart and all of my soul.”

Two people injured in the attack remain in hospital, while one has now been discharged.

PA understand­s from security sources that MI5 had received intelligen­ce that Saadallah planned to travel abroad, possibly for terrorism purposes, but the threat was found to be insubstant­ial and the informatio­n provided did not meet the threshold of investigat­ion.

Former head of UK counter terrorism Sir Mark Rowley told Today that police and security services face a “wicked problem” deciding which of the 40,000 people known to them could launch a terror attack.

The Prime Minister has promised that the Government “will not hesitate” to act if there are changes that could be made to legislatio­n in the wake of Saturday’s events.

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