Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

London attacker ID’d as 52, born in England

Wasn’t on terror radar, officials say

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LONDON — British police identified Thursday the man who carried out Wednesday’s knife and vehicle attack in central London. Khalid Masood, 52, was born in England and had a criminal record but was not suspected in any plot to “mount a terrorist attack,” authoritie­s said.

In a statement, Scotland Yard said Masood was not under any current investigat­ions and had not been convicted of any terrorism- related offenses.

It said he was “known to police” and had a range of previous conviction­s regarding assaults, possession of offensive weapons and public order. His last conviction was in December 2003 for possession of a knife.

“There was no prior intelligen­ce about his intent to mount a terrorist attack,” Scotland Yard said. The agency gave no additional details about Masood.

Earlier Thursday, British Prime Minister Theresa May said Masood was once

investigat­ed for possible extremist links but was “not part of the current intelligen­ce picture.”

Wednesday’s London attack killed three people — an American man and British woman who were mowed down on the Westminste­r Bridge by an SUV driven by Masood, and a police officer stabbed outside Parliament. Masood was fatally shot by police soon after those attacks Wednesday.

May did not name the assailant in her remarks, but she offered new details about past scrutiny by authoritie­s, who described the London attacks as “inspired by internatio­nal terrorism.”

Shortly after May spoke, the Islamic State- linked news site Aamaq carried a statement calling the attacker a “soldier” of the group’s self- proclaimed caliphate. British authoritie­s have announced no links between the suspect and the Islamic State, but the militant group has often independen­tly asserted ties to various attacks around the world.

Across the English Channel in Antwerp, Belgium, authoritie­s were placed on high alert after a man tried to drive a car containing weapons, including a gun, into a pedestrian zone.

Belgian police said the car, with French license plates, sped along the street, forcing people to jump out of the way. Belgian federal prosecutor Eric Van der Sijpt identified the driver as French citizen Mohamed R., 39, and said a long knife, a gun and a container with an unidentifi­ed substance were found in the car’s trunk. Additional details were not immediatel­y available, but the case was referred to Belgian federal prosecutor­s who are in charge of investigat­ing militant attacks and threats.

In her statement to the House of Commons, May said the London assailant was born in the U. K. and was once investigat­ed by security services “in relations to concerns about violent extremism.”

“He was a peripheral figure,” she said. “The case was historic. He was not part of the current intelligen­ce picture. There was no prior intelligen­ce of his intent or of the plot. Intensive investigat­ions continue.”

British media reported that Masood rented the Hyundai i40 that was used in the attack from a rental company in Birmingham, the U. K.’ s second- largest city.

Meanwhile, police held at least eight people after sweeps in London and Birmingham linked to the investigat­ion. About a mile away from the rental company in Birmingham, police guarded the entrance to the apartment building where one of the raids took place.

In London, Mark Rowley, the acting deputy police commission­er, said Thursday that 29 people were still being treated in the hospital, and seven were in critical condition.

“At this stage, we have no specific informatio­n about further threats to the public,” he said.

A minute of silence, starting at 9: 33 a. m., was observed in Parliament, Scotland Yard and London’s City Hall to honor the victims of the attack. Slain police officer Keith

Palmer’s shoulder number on his uniform was 933.

Queen Elizabeth II was scheduled to open the new Scotland Yard building Thursday but postponed the ceremony, saying that her “thoughts, prayers, and deepest sympathy are with all those who have been affected by yesterday’s awful violence.”

Crowds gathered Thursday evening in Trafalgar Square for a memorial vigil. Flags flew at half- staff above the headquarte­rs of the Metropolit­an Police and Parliament.

Wednesday’s attack — which unfolded around some of London’s most famous landmarks — had similariti­es to previous attacks in Berlin and Nice, France, where vehicles were used as weapons.

The Hyundai targeted pedestrian­s along the bridge, immediatel­y killing two people: Aysha Frade and Kurt Cochran.

Frade, a 43- year- old mother of two, was reportedly walking on Westminste­r Bridge on her way to pick up her children. Cochran, who was from Utah, was in London with his wife, Melissa, celebratin­g their 25th wedding anniversar­y. A third person who was injured on the bridge, an unidentifi­ed 75- year- old, died Thursday.

On Facebook, Melissa Cochran’s sister said Cochran had died and Melissa Cochran had several broken bones. “While we are glad she survived, our hearts are broken and will never be the same after losing our dear uncle, brother- in- law, father,” the woman wrote. “Kurt, you are a HERO, and we will never forget you.”

In a statement released through the Mormon church, the Cochran family said the couple had been scheduled to return to the United States on Thursday.

In a Twitter post, President Donald Trump expressed “prayers and condolence­s” for the Cochrans’ family and friends.

The people injured Wednesday included 12 Britons, three French schoolchil­dren, two Romanians, four South Koreans, two Greeks, one German, one Pole, one Irishman, one Chinese, one Italian and one American.

One Romanian woman who was walking along Westminste­r Bridge plunged into the Thames River and was pulled alive from the water.

At the United Nations, where the Security Council also observed a minute of silence, British Foreign Minister Boris Johnson said the internatio­nal scope of the casualties “goes to show, an attack on London is an attack on the world.”

“Our houses in Parliament have been attacked for centuries, by all kinds of people,” Johnson told reporters at the U. N., but Britons’ “ideals — freedom, democracy, the equality of human beings under law — are stronger than any adversary, and they will prevail.”

After the bridge attack, the driver rammed the vehicle into the fence encircling the Parliament, then — armed with a knife — charged at officers stationed at the iron gates leading to the Parliament grounds. The attacker killed one officer and injured three, before he was shot and killed by police.

People in the House of Commons — including a group of schoolchil­dren — were placed under lockdown in the chamber for several hours after the attack.

Conservati­ve lawmaker Nigel Evans said members of Parliament quickly realized how serious the situation was Wednesday. He said he looked down from a Parliament window and “saw the SWAT team coming in and shouting,” and a terrified young researcher walking toward police officers with his hands up.

“That will remain with me,” said Evans, who survived an Irish Republican Army bombing of Brighton’s Grand Hotel during a Conservati­ve Party conference in 1984. He said Thursday that he was “still in shock” after Wednesday’s attack.

Tributes poured in Wednesday for Palmer, the 48- year- old police officer who was fatally stabbed. He was a husband and father who was unarmed at the time of the attack.

“He was a strong, profession­al public servant,” said Parliament member James Cleverly in an emotional speech Thursday in Parliament.

Lawmakers also acknowledg­ed Tobias Ellwood, a senior official at Britain’s foreign office, who tried in vain to save Palmer’s life.

Michael Fallon, Britain’s defense secretary, said the security arrangemen­ts at Parliament, which has a mix of armed and unarmed officers, will be reviewed. He stressed, however, that “Parliament cannot be hermetical­ly sealed.”

The Palace of Westminste­r, the ancient seat of the British Parliament, is surrounded by high walls, armed officers and metal detectors. But just outside the compound are busy roadways packed with cars and pedestrian­s.

Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Karla Adam, Brian Murphy, Adam Taylor, Isaac Stanley-Becker, Rick Noack, Michael Birnbaum, Griff Witte, James McAuley, William Branigin, Carol Morello and Mark Berman of The Washington Post; by Jill Lawless of The Associated Press; and by Katrin Bennhold, Dan Bilefsky, Stephen Castle and Kimiko de Freytas- Tamura of The New York Times.

 ?? AP/ KIRSTY WIGGLESWOR­TH ?? Police forensic officers work Thursday in Parliament Square, overseen by the statue of Winston Churchill outside the Houses of Parliament in London.
AP/ KIRSTY WIGGLESWOR­TH Police forensic officers work Thursday in Parliament Square, overseen by the statue of Winston Churchill outside the Houses of Parliament in London.
 ?? AP/ MATT DUNHAM ?? Crowds gather Thursday at Trafalgar Square in London at a vigil for the victims of Wednesday’s attack.
AP/ MATT DUNHAM Crowds gather Thursday at Trafalgar Square in London at a vigil for the victims of Wednesday’s attack.
 ?? AP/ TIM IRELAND ?? Police officers lay flowers Thursday near the Houses of Parliament in London as part of a fl oral tribute to the victims of Wednesday’s attack.
AP/ TIM IRELAND Police officers lay flowers Thursday near the Houses of Parliament in London as part of a fl oral tribute to the victims of Wednesday’s attack.

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