Houston Chronicle

Attacker planned more harm at college

Freshman who stabbed 4 had many weapons

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SAN FRANCISCO — A freshman student who stabbed four people at a California university meant to do even more harm, but he acted alone and had no connection­s to terrorist groups, authoritie­s said Thursday.

Faisal Mohammad, 18, burst into his class at the University of California, Merced, and attacked a fellow student with a hunting knife Wednesday morning. He stabbed three others, including a constructi­on worker credited with preventing Mohammad from killing anyone, before police shot him dead as he fled.

Police found zip-tie handcuffs, duct tape and a hammer in a backpack near his body. It also contained two plastic baggies of petroleum jelly, which Merced County Sheriff Vern Warnke called a “poor man’s” explosive if ignited.

Warnke and other officials said background checks of Mohammad and his family show the 18-year-old had no connection­s to organized hate or terror groups and no past behavior to suggest he would lash out violently.

“We had zero to indicate he was on anyone’s radar,” Warnke said.

Investigat­ors also found a list of items Mohammad planned to pack in his backpack before the attacks.

“His intention was to do more damage,” school spokeswoma­n Lorena Anderson said. “But there is absolutely no reason to believe that this was anything more than an angry young man acting alone.”

Anderson said it’s unclear if Mohammad targeted anyone in particular in the class required of all university freshmen. All four victims are expected to survive.

Byron Price, 31, a constructi­on worker doing remodeling work next door, interrupte­d the attack, rushing into the classroom to break up what he thought was a fistfight. Price said Mohammad charged at him with the knife and looked scared.

“He also looked like he was having fun,” said Price, who was stabbed in the side. “His eyes, I could see fear in his eyes. He was smiling.”

His college roommate called him an anti-social loner. But a high school buddy expressed shock that Mohammad stabbed four people.

“He was quiet, but he was really friendly,” Ish Patel said. “He was intelligen­t, too — he performed well academical­ly.”

Patel said Mohammad enjoyed basketball, going to the mosque to pray and playing video games with his friends. He lost contact with Mohammad after they graduated from high school in Santa Clara, Calif., in June.

“I’m definitely shocked,” Patel said.

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