– ‘Violent temper’ –
“He appears to have followed almost exactly to a ‘T’ the instructions that ISIS has put out in its social media channels,” New York police deputy commissioner for intelligence and counter-terrorism John Miller said.
He was allegedly found in possession of three knives and two cell phones contained thousands of IS propaganda images and dozens of videos that showed IS fighters killing prisoners.
The US president vowed to “get rid” of the lottery program that allowed Saipov to enter the country, seizing on the attack to further restrict immigration.
But an increasingly detailed picture emerged Thursday of a suspect who only radicalized after moving to the United States in March 2010, his ambitions thwarted, growing out a thick beard and reportedly developing a violent temper.
The Uzbek government said nothing suggested he had been an extremist at home. He is the fourth man with Uzbek-links tied to attacks overseas in less than a year.
“His parents followed traditional Islam and were never seen in connection with any extremist branches,” said a statement on a government-linked information agency.
The New York Times reported that he was a university-educated accountant from a well-off family when he migrated to the United States with dreams of prospering.
He won the green card lottery and moved to Ohio, before eventually finding work as a trucker and marrying a fellow Uzbek immigrant.
But over the years, he ran up traffic infractions, lost jobs and an imam worried that he increasingly misinterpreted Islam, the Times said, before the family relocated to the New Jersey town of Paterson.
The West Side bike lane where the attack happened has now re-opened, allowing tourists and New Yorkers to cycle or stroll in unseasonably warm weather, past bouquets and an Argentinian football jersey in tribute to the victims.
Tedd Wright, 43, said he didn’t think twice before taking the path on his way to work Thursday.
“Not in America… You’re hit in the face. What are you gonna do?” he said. “We’ll win by positivity. There’s way more good people in the world than bad people.”