Edmonton Journal

Police seek clues in beheading case

French authoritie­s take suspect to his home to search for passport

- ALEX TURNBULL AND JAMEY KEATEN

SAINT-PRIEST, FRANCE — Police wearing masks escorted them an accused of beheading a businessma­n to the suspect’s home in southeaste­rn France on Sunday to try to find his passport to determine if he travelled abroad, a security official said.

Yassine Salhi, 35, was handcuffed and wearing jeans, a knee-length djellaba robe and a loose towel over his head when judicial police brought him into his residence in the town of Saint-Priest, outside Lyon. The images were broadcast on French TV.

The suspect and police spent a little over an hour in Salhi’s home. It wasn’t immediatel­y clear if police found what they were looking for. Sirens blaring, the police returned him to a Lyon police station where he was initially questioned.

A security official told The Associated Press that police were searching for Salhi’s passport, to determine if he travelled abroad. Another official said he was expected to be transporte­d to France’s counterter­rorism police headquarte­rs near Paris later Sunday.

Salhi, a truck deliveryma­n and father of three with a history of ties to Islamic extremists, admitted earlier to the killing of the manager of the transporta­tion company that had employed Salhi since March, police said.

The suspect allegedly crashed a truck into a U.S.-owned chemical warehouse on Friday, setting off an explosion, and hung his employer’s head on the factory’s gate. He was quickly arrested afterward. Officials say he sent a “selfie” of himself and the victim to a Canadian mobile phone number.

Investigat­ors have found no links to any internatio­nal terror group in the attack on Friday. After two days in custody for questionin­g in Lyon, Salhi’s wife and sister were released, a French official said. The officials spoke only on condition of anonymity because the investigat­ion is continuing.

French police on Sunday lifted a 48-hour secure perimeter around the site of the warehouse in Saint-Quentin-- Fallavier near Lyon, allowing for the first pictures that show the damage sustained in the blast.

The severed head appeared to imitate a practice of the radical ISIL group of beheading prisoners. It came days after the militants urged attacks during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan. French authoritie­s say Salhi had links to radical Salafists in the past.

Prime Minister Manuel Valls said that “we cannot accept barbarity” and estimated 10,000 to 15,000 Salafists, who preach an ultraconse­rvative form of Islam, were present in France.

 ?? LAURENT CIPRIANI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Yassine Salhi, the suspect in the beheading of a businessma­n, is escorted by police officers as they leave his home in Saint-Priest, outside the city of Lyon.
LAURENT CIPRIANI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Yassine Salhi, the suspect in the beheading of a businessma­n, is escorted by police officers as they leave his home in Saint-Priest, outside the city of Lyon.

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