NEW YORK (Reuters) - A man driving a rented pickup truck mowed down
pedestrians and cyclists on a bike path alongside the Hudson River in New York
Cit
y on Tuesday, killing eight people and injuring about a dozen in what
authorities said was an act of terrorism.
The 29-year-old suspect was shot in the abdomen by police and arrested
after he crashed the truck into a school bus and fled his vehicle, authorities
said. A U.S. law enforcement source told Reuters the suspect is an
Uzbekistan-born immigrant.
CNN and The New York Times, each citing law enforcement sources, reported
that investigators found a note left by the suspect claiming he carried out the
attack in the name of the Islamic State militant group.
Five of the dead were Argentine citizens, visiting New York as part of a
group of friends celebrating the 30th anniversary of their high school
graduation, the Argentina Foreign Ministry said. A sixth member of the group
was among those hospitalized after the attack, the ministry said in a
statement.
The incident marked the greatest loss of life from a suspected terrorist
attack in New York since suicide hijackers crashed jetliners into the Twin
Towers of the World Trade Center in lower Manhattan on Sept. 11, 2001, killing
more than 2,600 people.
Tuesday’s assault, on the far west side of lower Manhattan a few blocks
from the site of the World Trade Center, was reminiscent of several deadly
vehicle attacks in Europe during the past 15 months.
“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,” Mayor Bill de Blasio told a news conference.
A representative of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security similarly
called the incident an “apparent act of terrorism.”
Governor Andrew Cuomo said the suspect appeared to have acted alone.
“There’s no evidence to suggest a wider plot or a wider scheme. These are
the actions of one individual meant to cause pain and harm and probably death,”
Cuomo told the same news conference.
Asked later in a CNN interview whether the suspect had been known to
authorities before the attack, Cuomo replied: “It’s too early to give you a
definitive answer.”
(To view a graphic on the location of the New York truck attack, click
tmsnrt.rs/2z3aqZv)
JOINT TASK FORCE
New York City Police Commissioner James O‘Neill declined to publicly
identify the driver. However, a source familiar with the investigation told
Reuters the driver’s name was Sayfullo Saipov.
CNN and NBC News reported that he entered the United States in 2010.
Multiple media outlets, including CNN, cited police officials as saying
that the suspect shouted “Allahu Akbar” - Arabic for “God is greatest” - when
he jumped out of his truck.
O‘Neill would only say when asked at the news conference that an
unspecified comment by the suspect when he exited his truck, and the general
circumstances of the assault, led investigators to label the incident a
“terrorist event.”
The Federal Bureau of Investigation joined the New York City Police
Department and other agencies in a Joint Terrorism Task Force to conduct a
probe of the attack, the FBI said in a statement.
ABC News reported that Saipov lived in Tampa, Florida. A check of court
records related to a traffic citation that Saipov received in eastern
Pennsylvania in 2015 showed he listed addresses then in Paterson, New Jersey,
and Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio.
The suspect drove onto the bike path in lower Manhattan at 3:05 p.m. and
sped south for about 20 city blocks, running down pedestrians and bicyclists
along the way before slamming into the side of the school bus. Two children and
two adults were injured in that collision, O‘Neill said.
The man then climbed out of this truck with what appeared to be a
handgun. Police later recovered a paint-ball gun and a pellet gun from the
scene, authorities said.
O‘Neill said the pickup truck driven by the suspect had been rented from
the Home Depot hardware chain, but declined to say where it was rented.
MANGLED BICYCLES
Mangled and flattened bicycles littered the sunlit bike path, which runs
parallel to the West Side Highway along the Hudson River, after the attack.
Of the eight people killed, six were pronounced dead at the scene and two
more were pronounced dead at a nearby hospital, O‘Neill said.
Fire Commissioner Daniel Nigro said 11 survivors with serious but
non-life-threatening injuries were taken to hospitals.
Despite the attack, thousands of costumed Halloween revelers turned out
hours later for New York City’s main Halloween parade, which went on as
scheduled Tuesday night with a heightened police presence just a few blocks
from the scene of the carnage.
U.S. President Donald Trump was briefed on the incident, White House
spokeswoman Sarah Sanders said.
Trump, who has pressed for a ban on travelers entering the United States
from some predominantly Muslim countries, said on Twitter he had ordered
Homeland Security officials to “step up our already Extreme Vetting Program.
Being politically correct is fine, but not for this!”
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