Bastille Day attacker sent text asking for ‘more weapons’, French reports say, as another two suspects are detained
Mohamed Lahouaiej Bouhlel, the man behind last week’s truck attack in Nice in which 84 people were killed, sent a text message before the attack demanding “more weapons”, French media reported Sunday, citing investigators.
The text message, investigators said, was sent to one of the four men arrested in connection with the attack on Saturday.
Bouhlel on Thursday drove a delivery truck through crowds of people along Nice’s main promenade as a fireworks display to celebrate Bastille Day was ending. He used a pistol to shoot into the crowd before he was killed by police.
The two are suspected of helping Bouhlel obtain the pistol, according to a French security official not authorised to be publicly named speaking about an ongoing investigation.
French weekly Journal du Dimanche cited investigators as saying Bouhlel emptied his bank account, sold his car and told friends about his radicalisation before the attack.