Los Angeles Times

N.Y. attack suspect talks to cops

Details his plans and radicaliza­tion by Islamic State

- By Matt Pearce, Matt Hansen and Nina Agrawal

NEW YORK — The suspect charged Wednesday in the first deadly terrorist attack in New York City since Sept. 11, 2001, became radicalize­d by watching Islamic State videos on his cellphone and struck on Halloween to kill as many people as possible, authoritie­s said.

Sayfullo Saipov, 29, was charged in federal court with supporting Islamic State extremists and vehicular violence after officials said he drove a rental truck down a busy riverfront bike path near the World Trade Center in Lower Manhattan a day earlier, killing eight people and injuring at least a dozen. He was arrested after a police officer shot him in the abdomen.

While hospitaliz­ed, Saipov — a trucker and an Uber driver who legally came to the U.S. from Uzbekistan in 2010 — reportedly told law enforcemen­t officials that he had turned to radicalism a year ago after watching a video of Islamic State leader Abu Bakr Baghdadi asking what Muslims in the U.S. were doing about the deaths of Muslims in Iraq.

Saipov said he started planning the truck attack two months ago. He asked for an Islamic State f lag to be draped in his hospital room and said “he felt good about what he had done,” according to court documents.

But if the attack was meant to bring New York City to its knees, New Yorkers instead largely brushed it off, holding Halloween festivitie­s as usual, taking their kids to school and switching out decoration­s for the upcoming winter holidays — shaken, but determined to push forward.

Jenny Sheffer-Stevens took her son Hutch, 12, back to school at IS 289 Middle School, which sits near the intersecti­on where Saipov’s rented truck had hit a school bus. Hutch had seen the end of the attack, and the school gave him the option to stay home.

Sheffer-Stevens and her son decided against it —

they wanted “a balance between business as usual and keeping the conversati­on going,” she said.

The New York City Marathon, which typically draws tens of thousands of runners, was expected to be held as scheduled on Sunday.

In Washington, Saipov’s immigratio­n history and apparent extremism prompted the Trump administra­tion to respond more aggressive­ly than it did after the Oct. 1 mass shooting in Las Vegas that left 58 people dead. The administra­tion at that time urged caution as investigat­ors gathered facts.

The White House and some members of Congress on Wednesday referred to Saipov as an “enemy combatant.”

Taking aim at Democrats, President Trump called for Congress to crack down on U.S. immigratio­n programs, including the Diversity Immigrant Visa program that Saipov used to enter the U.S.

“We have to get much tougher, we have to get much smarter, and we have to get much less politicall­y correct,” Trump said before the start of a Cabinet meeting in Washington. “We’re so politicall­y correct that we’re afraid to do anything.”

Trump also criticized the judicial system’s handling of terrorism cases, which are addressed in federal court and typically bring conviction­s and long sentences a year or two after arrest.

“We also have to come up with punishment that’s far quicker and far greater than the punishment these animals are getting right now,” Trump said.

Sen. John McCain (RAriz.) told reporters at the Capitol that Saipov should be taken to the U.S. jail in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Saipov should not be read Miranda rights to remain silent because enemy combatants are not entitled to such rights, McCain said in a separate statement.

Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), who called the attack heartbreak­ing, also said Saipov “should be held as an enemy combatant under the law of war,” saying ample evidence suggests the suspect was motivated to kill by radical Islamic thought and acted in allegiance to Islamic State.

The Trump administra­tion said the president would support sending Saipov to Guantanamo.

Later in the day, however, prosecutor­s said Saipov was criminally charged in the federal Southern District of New York, suggesting that his case will be handled similarly to other recent terrorism cases.

The issue of Miranda rights didn’t seem to matter, as Saipov had waived his right to remain silent, according to court documents, which said investigat­ors had found 90 videos and 3,800 images related to Islamic State on his phone, including some of the gruesome torture and executions of the group’s prisoners.

A roughly two-mile stretch of highway in Lower Manhattan was shut down for the investigat­ion. Authoritie­s also converged on a New Jersey apartment building and a van in a parking lot at a New Jersey Home Depot store, where Saipov was thought to have rented a flatbed truck for a 75-minute time period — with no intention to return it, according to court documents.

Saipov had also rented a truck on Oct. 22 to practice his turns, and he initially thought of carrying out the attack with Islamic State flags on his windows, before deciding that doing so would draw too much attention, officials said.

After Saipov carried out his attack Tuesday afternoon, he emerged from the truck shouting “Allahu akbar” — “God is great” in Arabic — and carrying paintball and pellet guns that resembled real guns. Officials said there were knives and a stun gun at the scene, and a document in English and Arabic written by Saipov that said Islamic State “will endure,” documents said.

On Wednesday, investigat­ors announced they were seeking another Uzbek man, Mukhammadz­oir Kadirov, 32, for questionin­g in the case, but soon said they were no longer looking for him. They declined to provide further informatio­n.

The attacker’s victims reflected a city that is a melting pot and a magnet for visitors: One of the dead was from Belgium. Five were from Argentina and were celebratin­g the 30th anniversar­y of a school graduation, according to officials in those countries. The injured included students and employees on a school bus that the driver rammed.

“This was an act of terror, and a particular­ly cowardly act of terror aimed at innocent civilians, aimed at people going about their lives who had no idea what was about to hit them,” said Mayor Bill de Blasio.

An Ohio-linked Facebook account with a similar spelling of Saipov’s name, which has since been removed, revealed little about its owner other than an apparent interest in cars and that he studied at the Tashkent Moliya Institute in Uzbekistan.

A fellow Uzbek truck driver in Ohio, Mirrakhmat Muminov, told the Associated Press that Saipov was “not happy with his life” and bickered with friends and family.

Saipov had lost his license because of traffic tickets and companies had stopped hiring him, Muminov said. Saipov then moved to New Jersey, where his truck engine reportedly blew up a few months ago, which “probably hurt him more than anything,” Muminov said.

New York and other cities around the globe have been on high alert against attacks by extremists in vehicles. England, France, Spain and Germany have seen deadly vehicle attacks in the last year or so.

New York Police Department Deputy Commission­er John Miller said that Saipov had never been the subject of an NYPD Intelligen­ce Bureau investigat­ion or an FBI investigat­ion, but that it was likely that he would be found to have connection­s to others who have been.

Tuesday’s attack came four days after another Uzbek immigrant, Abdurasul Hasanovich Juraboev of Brooklyn, was sentenced to 15 years in federal prison after threatenin­g on an Uzbeklangu­age website to kill President Obama on behalf of Islamic State and to fly to Syria to join the group.

Uzbekistan President Shavkat Mirziyoyev sent his condolence­s to Trump and the families of the victims and offered his country’s assistance in investigat­ing the attack.

 ?? Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times ?? “I WALK the path every day. It’s been a source of peace for me,” said George Embiricos, leaving f lowers at the bike path in Manhattan in commemorat­ion of the eight people killed in Tuesday’s truck attack.
Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times “I WALK the path every day. It’s been a source of peace for me,” said George Embiricos, leaving f lowers at the bike path in Manhattan in commemorat­ion of the eight people killed in Tuesday’s truck attack.
 ?? Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times ?? ELLIE ANZILOTTI and Derek Magee join an interfaith vigil in New York for the victims of Tuesday’s attack. The Trump administra­tion and some in Congress said the suspect should be handled as an enemy combatant.
Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times ELLIE ANZILOTTI and Derek Magee join an interfaith vigil in New York for the victims of Tuesday’s attack. The Trump administra­tion and some in Congress said the suspect should be handled as an enemy combatant.

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