Reports: Terror cell planned to target landmarks

Left to right: Driss Oukabir, Mohamed Aallaa, Salah El Karib, Mohamed Houli Chemlal, suspected of involvement in the terror cell that carried out twin attacks in Spain, is escorded by Spanish Civil Guards from a detention center in Tres Cantos, near Madrid, on August 22, 2017 before being tranferred to the National Court. Under heavy security, police vans entered the National Court, which deals with terrorism cases, where a judge will question them and decide what -- if any -- charges to press against them over the vehicle attacks that left 15 dead and 120 injured.
Relatives of terror suspects are in shock
02:39 - Source: CNN

Story highlights

Car used in Cambrils attack caught on camera in Paris days before

Two suspects charged at a preliminary hearing

Barcelona, Spain CNN  — 

Two suspects allegedly connected to the terror cell behind attacks in Spain were formally charged Tuesday amid reports the cell was planning to target landmarks in Barcelona.

Mohamed Houli Chemlal and Driss Oukabir were charged by Madrid’s High Court at a preliminary hearing on Tuesday with membership in a terrorist organization, murder and explosives possession.

Chemlal told a judge the group was preparing bombs to attack “monuments” in the Catalan city, state broadcaster RTVE and news agency EFE reported.

Another suspect, Driss Oukabir, is taken into Madrid's High Court on Tuesday.

Two other men arrested in connection with last week’s terror attacks in Barcelona and Cambrils also appeared in court.

Salah El Karib will be held for further questioning. Mohamed Aalla was released and has to appear in court every Monday, a court document says.

Salah el Karib, one of four suspects arrested in the  attacks, is escorted into court Tuesday in Madrid.

The four suspected members of the cell were in court less than 24 hours after police killed Younes Abouyaaqoub, the suspected driver of the van in Barcelona.

The attack killed 13 people and injured more than 100 others.

Spanish authorities said they have identified the body of Abdelbaki Es Satty, an imam who died in a house explosion in Alcanar last Wednesday night, a court document says. Chemlal was reportedly injured.

Chemial told the judge that Satty planned to immolate himself in an attack on a landmark, the media outlets said. RTVE cited “court officials.”

A second body at the house has not been identified.

Investigators also recovered butane bombs, TATP and several ISIS-related documents inside the house, including plane tickets to Brussels, Belgium, the document says.

Audi caught on camera in France

Officials also revealed that a vehicle used in another deadly attack last week had been seen earlier in France.

The car, an Audi A3, was caught speeding on camera in Paris in the days before Friday’s attack in the Spanish town of Cambrils, French Interior Minister Gérard Collomb said.

One woman was killed when the vehicle mowed down pedestrians early Friday in Cambrils. The five assailants in the car were shot dead by police at the scene.

An employee starts to tow away a car involved in a terrorist attack in Cambrils, south of Barcelona.

The Cambrils attack came hours after the Barcelona attack.

Collomb told CNN affiliate BFMTV on Tuesday he was unsure why the car in the Cambrils rampage had been in Paris and said the terror cell behind the attacks was not on the radar of French authorities.

Also Tuesday, Moroccan security forces detained a 34-year-old man in Oujda, Morocco, near the Algerian border, state-run television reported, citing sources close to the investigation. The man was detained for possible links to the Barcelona attack, the station said.

The man resides in Ripoli, Spain, north of Barcelona, the same town where eight of the 12 terror cell members lived.

Moroccan security forces are working with Catalan authorities and have sent experts to Spain to assist with the investigation.

Van driver shot dead

Police deployed a robot to remove what turned out to be a fake explosives belt from Abouyaaqoub’s body before officers were cleared to approach it and make a positive identification, authorities said Monday. The suspect had knives in his possession when he was shot, said José Lluís Trapero, head of Catalan police.

A police officer stands by the Sagrada Familia basilica in Barcelona on August 20, 2017, before a mass to commemorate victims of two devastating terror attacks in Barcelona and Cambrils.
A grief-stricken Barcelona prepared today to commemorate victims of two devastating terror attacks at a mass in the city's Sagrada Familia church. As investigators scrambled to piece together the attacks which killed 14 people in all, Interior Minister Juan Ignacio Zoido said on August 19 the cell behind the carnage that also injured 120 and plunged the country into shock had been "dismantled," though local authorities took a more cautious tone.

 / AFP PHOTO / PASCAL GUYOT        (Photo credit should read PASCAL GUYOT/AFP/Getty Images)
Police: Barcelona attack suspect dead
01:23 - Source: CNN

A woman alerted authorities after seeing police photos of Abouyaaqoub and becoming suspicious that the man was wearing long sleeves when it was hot outside, Trapero said. Witness accounts suggest Abouyaaqoub was alone when police arrived, Trapero said.

Bomb factory in a beach town may be key to terror attacks

Abouyaaqoub, a 22-year-old Moroccan, was the suspected driver of the van that sped down Las Ramblas in the center of Barcelona on Thursday, leaving dead and injured people in its wake.

Investigators said Abouyaaqoub fled the scene on foot and hijacked a car to escape. Abouyaaqoub allegedly stabbed the owner of the car, Pau Pérez, as he parked the vehicle, and drove off with the man’s body in the car. Pérez later was found dead in the vehicle, making him the 15th victim of the attacks in Barcelona and Cambrils.

Police fired on the car after it rammed through a checkpoint, but Abouyaaqoub was able to flee a second time.

Authorities said none of the 12 suspects had any previous link to terror activities.

The investigation has focused on a property in Alcanar, a coastal village southwest of Barcelona, that exploded last week before the attacks.

The house is suspected of having been used as a base to make bombs that could have caused even more devastating attacks had they not blown up prematurely.

A source briefed on the probe said a preliminary assessment indicated traces of the powerful explosive TATP in the rubble. TATP was used in a series of deadly bombing attacks in Europe in recent years.

Police believe Muslim cleric Abdelbakir El-Satty is among those who died in the Alcanar blast.

The cleric once served a jail sentence for drug trafficking in the eastern Spanish province of Castellon, Catalan Justice Minister Carles Mundó i Blanch said.

Some Spanish media reported he shared a jail cell with one of the terrorists involved in the 2004 Madrid bombings that killed at least 191 people and left hundreds injured.

Responding to those reports, Blanch said, “We are not aware that this person had any communication with any inmate in any prison in Catalonia. He finished his sentence and went free.”

CNN’s Tim Lister reported from Barcelona, while James Masters wrote from London. CNN’s Matou Diop, Radina Gigova, Vasco Cotovio, Milena Veselinovic and Merieme Arif contributed to this report.