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Feds: Accused NYC bike path terrorist threatened to decapitate CO

Sayfullo Saipov allegedly threatened to kill a CO if the officer opened his cell door

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Crime scene unit investigators on Wednesday, Nov. 1, 2017 examine a vehicle involved in a terrorist attack on the West Side Highway bike path in Manhattan, N.Y.

Photo/TNS

Stephen Rex Brown
New York Daily News

NEW YORK — The unrepentant Uzbek man accused of fatally running over eight people with a truck on a lower Manhattan bike path threatened to decapitate a correction officer, the feds charged Wednesday.

New papers filed ahead of Sayfullo Saipov’s trial in April added disturbing new details to the horrific truck attack on the Hudson River bike bath on Halloween 2017 — and alleged that he remained a danger behind bars at the Metropolitan Correctional Center.

Saiopov’s threats to jail staff began the evening of Dec. 17 when he became infuriated by an officer who frequently slammed a door, prosecutors wrote. During a confrontation, Saipov allegedly threatened to kill the officer if the guard dared open his cell.

“Other guys will be picking up your dead body!” Saipov barked, according to court papers.

The accused ISIS sympathizer was still fuming the next day and obstructed a camera in his cell, prosecutors said. A supervising officer ordered him to remove the obstruction, but Saipov refused. Saipov “said that he would not remove the obstruction until the Officer’s head was cut off, and referred to the Officer as an animal,” prosecutors wrote.

At a disciplinary hearing Saipov reiterated the threat and said he wanted to “cut this animal head off,” papers read.

Prosecutors seek to tell a jury about the episode should Saipov’s trial reach the death penalty phase. The threat was evidence of “future dangerousness” that weighs in favor of capital punishment, authorities said.

The feds detailed overwhelming evidence against Saipov in an 80-page document. Two of Saipov’s cellphones allegedly contained over 6,000 images, audio and video of terrorist propaganda. One image showed a tire covered in blood, surrounded by skulls, with the order to “run them over without mercy,” prosecutors wrote.

Saipov immersed himself in ISIS’s twisted culture three years before the attack. He practiced maneuvering the rental pickup truck in the days leading up to the killing spree when he rammed cyclists at pedestrians on the bike path along the Hudson River at speeds as high as 65 mph, prosecutors wrote. Saipov had planned to continue driving to the Brooklyn Bridge but crashed into a school bus at Chambers St. and West St., according to prosecutors. An NYPD cop shot Saipov, ending the attack.

Inside the truck authorities found three knives and a drawing of the ISIS flag along with slogans associated with the terrorist group, prosecutors claim. While being questioned at Bellevue Hospital, Saipov asked if an ISIS flag could be hung in a window and praised the group’s now-deceased leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the feds said.

Prosecutors plan to use Saipov’s rants in court against him during the trial. During several court appearances Saipov has praised ISIS and said he does not recognize the court’s authority.

U.S. laws were made by “weak minds,” he said during a June 2018 hearing. Saipov proclaimed that ISIS was “leading a war . . . to impose sharia (law) on earth.”

“Just as the defendant was eager to speak to the FBI about his murderous attack and his devotion to ISIS in the hours after he was arrested, he was eager to speak in court about the same. Moreover, the in-court statements demonstrate the defendant’s commitment to ISIS and knowledge of its precepts,” prosecutors wrote.

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