Story highlights

NEW: Doctors expect hospitalized officer to be released sometime this weekend

Suspect traveled to US legally by car at Lake Champlain, New York, FBI says

CNN  — 

The man suspected of stabbing a police officer at a Michigan airport was denied a gun purchase in the Flint area within the last five days because he’s not from the United States, a law enforcement source told CNN on Thursday.

Amor Ftouhi, 49, a citizen of Canada and Tunisia, has been charged with violence at an international airport, officials said. The FBI is investigating Wednesday’s stabbing at Flint’s Bishop International Airport as a terrorist act.

Authorities said Ftouhi yelled “Allahu akbar” – “God is the greatest” in Arabic – and pulled a roughly 12-inch knife with an 8-inch serrated blade and stabbed Lt. Jeff Neville in the neck. Neville is expected to be released from the hospital this weekend.

House Homeland Security Chairman Michael McCaul confirmed the attempted gun purchase and said authorities believe Ftouhi was “self-radicalized.”

“I don’t think he was on anyone’s radar screen, but we do know he traveled from Canada to New York to Michigan,” McCaul told CNN.

“What I think the significance of that is you have someone coming across the northern border from Canada into the United States to try and kill police officers in the homeland,” the Texas Republican said.

The suspect appears to be as unfamiliar to his neighbors as he was to terror investigators in Canada and the United States.

David Gelios, special agent in charge of the Detroit FBI division, said the knife used in the attack was purchased in the United States.

Ftouhi traveled into the United States legally by car at Lake Champlain, New York, last Friday and appeared to have been in Michigan as early as Sunday, according to Gelios. The suspect’s vehicle was found at the airport.

Montreal neighbor calls him a ‘kind person’

Ftouhi lived In Montreal’s working-class Saint-Michel district, home to many North African Muslims, with his wife and three children.

Hakeem, an Algerian native who declined to give his last name, said his neighbor was “a kind person,” and quiet. Ftouhi largely kept to himself, he said. The neighbor said he would see Ftouhi’s children come and go.

“I said hello going up and down the stairs,” Hakeem told CNN on Thursday. “We were neighborly.”

Next-door neighbor Joassaint Guillaubert said he recalled hearing children running around, but did not know they were Ftouhi’s children.

Both said they never saw the suspect’s wife.

He was not on US or Canadian radar

The suspect was made to wear a spit-guard face mask at a hearing Wednesday after spitting in the face of a Flint police officer, according to a law enforcement official.

He was ordered to remain in custody pending a full detention hearing next week.

Ftouhi has lived in Montreal for 10 years, according to a pretrial services officer at his hearing. He worked on and off as a truck driver until about two weeks ago. His mother, three sisters and two brothers live in Tunisia; another sister resides in Switzerland.

Ftouhi understands and speaks some English, but is mostly fluent in French.

“My first name is Amor and my last name is Ftouhi,” he told the court.

US Magistrate Judge Stephanie Dawkins Davis assigned a federal public defender to represent the suspect. Asked whether the information on his financial affidavit was truthful, Ftouhi the judge: “Yes, I tell the truth.”

Department of Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly described Ftouhi as a “completely off-the-screen individual” and likened the airport stabbing to random terrorist attacks in Europe in recent months.

A law enforcement source told CNN that Ftouhi was not on the radar of US or Canadian authorities but said they were trying to determine whether he used an alias.

The Canadian Office of the Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness condemned what it called a “heinous and cowardly attack.”

Ftouhi could face up to 20 years in prison and more charges could be added, officials said. It wasn’t immediately clear whether Ftouhi had an attorney.

The attack

On Wednesday morning, Ftouhi arrived to Flint’s Bishop International Airport carrying two bags. For about 40 minutes he lingered in the airport’s public areas – including a restaurant and a bathroom where he dropped his bags – before the attack, a criminal complaint said.

After stabbing Neville, Ftouhi continued to yell “Allah” several times followed by something similar to “you have killed people in Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan, and we are all going to die,” the complaint said.

“Lt. Neville got him to stop stabbing him,” said Chief Chris Miller of the Bishop Airport Safety Division, who was nearby during the attack and was able to handcuff Ftouhi.

An FBI special agent said Ftouhi then asked the officer why he did not kill him, the complaint said.

Neville was in stable condition Wednesday. He had worked at the airport for years and rose to the rank of lieutenant in 2006, according to airport director Craig Williams.

“He’s a great guy,” Williams told reporters. “He’s well-loved by everybody just for his personality, his professionalism. He treats everybody with respect.”

A maintenance worker suffered arm injuries while helping to subdue the suspect. The employee was taken to the hospital and was later released.

“He was talking and communicating well, but in quite a bit of pain following the surgery … (he) seems to be doing well,” he said. Neville retired from the Genesee County Sheriff’s Office after 20 years on the job, Young said.

A airport maintenance worker who was speaking with Neville suffered arm injuries while helping to subdue the suspect. The employee was taken to the hospital and was later released.

“I’m not afraid to say I think he saved Jeff’s life,” Williams said. “He jumped up there and did something that is courageous.”

‘Life-threatening injuries

The stabbing caused a 12-inch-long neck laceration that left Neville with “life-threatening injuries,” Hurley Medical Center trauma surgeon Dr. Donald Scholten said.

“This was not a shaving nick,” Scholten said at a news conference Friday.

The laceration “was probably very, very close to severing his major artery and nerve, perhaps even his windpipe and his digestive system.”

“This was a matter of millimeters, a matter of very, very small dimensions,” the doctor explained.

Scholten praised and admired Neville’s “calm and cooperative” demeanor in what was a dangerous situation.

First responders performed “hemorrhage control” on Neville and played a major role in his emergency care by the time he got to surgery, Scholten said.

“Fortunately for both him and for us,” Scholten said, “there was not injury to the major blood vessel, either the vein or the artery that go to the brain – the jugular vein or the carotid artery.”

“And in fact, his airway, that is his trachea or his digestive system, the esophagus, were not injured.”

Doctors expect Neville to be released in 24 to 48 hours. Scholten said he believes the officer will be able to resume “usual activities” in six to eight weeks but “not his unusual activities.”

Police on the scene Wednesday at a terminal at Bishop International Airport in Flint, Michigan.

A lone-wolf attack

Fthoui seemed to have acted alone and had no specialized training, officials said.

“Time will tell over the next several days whether anyone had any knowledge of this, but at this time we view him as a lone-wolf attacker,” Gelios said. “We have no information to suggest a wider plot.”

Authorities interviewed Fthoui extensively after the attack and said the stabbing appears to have targeted law enforcement.

“I think it’s sufficient to say he has a hatred for the United States and a variety of other things, which in part motivated him towards coming to the airport today to conduct this act of violence,” the FBI special agent said.

President Donald Trump was briefed on the attack, an administration official told CNN.

“(P)lease keep the attacked officer in your thoughts & prayers,” Snyder said on Twitter.

“We here in Flint are a resilient community; we understand what it means to stand together, to struggle together, to protect one another, and to overcome together,” said Mohammed Saleem, president of the center’s management committee.

“We will not allow others with their own political agendas to divide us,” he added.

A previous version of this story misspelled Amor Ftouhi’s last name. It has been corrected.

Samira Said reported from Montreal. CNN’s Shimon Prokupecz, Mary Kay Mallonee, Eric Levenson, Tony Marco, Darran Simon, Joe Sterling, Keith Allen, Kaitlan Collins, Rene Marsh, Kristina Sgueglia and Lauren Del Valle contributed to this report.