4 killed by knife-wielding IT worker at Paris police HQ
Emergency personnel stand near an air ambulance helicopter on the Pont Marie near Paris prefecture de police (police headquarters) after three persons have been hurt in a knife attack on Oct. 3, 2019. (AFP Photo)


A knife-wielding man who worked at police headquarters in central Paris went on a rampage Thursday, stabbing to death four employees before himself being shot dead, officials said.

A fifth person was critically injured and was being treated in hospital after the deadliest attack on police in France in years, the motive of which was still unclear.

The attacker was a 45-year-old IT worker in the police intelligence department. He killed three male officers and a female assistant before being shot in the courtyard of the square stone building next to Notre-Dame cathedral in the historic heart of Paris.

The man, who was born in the French Caribbean territory of Martinique and had worked for the police since 2003, had a hearing disability.

Police searched his home in a quiet residence in Gonesse, a low-income suburb north of Paris, and took his wife into custody, Heitz told reporters.

Interior Minister Christophe Castaner said the assailant had "never shown any behavioral problems."

The police were "particularly stricken by this exceptionally grave incident," said Castaner, who postponed a planned trip to Greece and Turkey to visit the scene with President Emmanuel Macron.

The assailant used a kitchen knife to stab the three policemen in their offices before going on to attack the female employee on the staircase.

In the courtyard, he was confronted by an officer who ordered him to drop the knife. When he refused, the officer shot him in the head, police sources said.

Heitz said he was "in constant contact" with anti-terrorism investigators about the case but that for the moment it was being handled by his office.

The police building was cordoned off after the lunchtime attack in the historic center of Paris, near Notre-Dame cathedral, and dozens of police and emergency vehicles converged at the scene.

"People were running everywhere, there was crying everywhere," said Emery Siamandi, an interpreter who was in the building when the attack happened.

"I heard a shot, I gathered it was inside," he told AFP. "Moments later, I saw police officers crying. They were in a panic."

Initial reports said investigators believed a workplace dispute could have sparked the incident.

"Did he snap, or was there some other reason? It's still too early to say," Loic Travers, head of the Alliance Police union for the Paris region, told BFM television.

Thursday's killings comes amid growing tensions within the ranks of the police, who have been stretched to the limit after a year of trying to contain weekly "yellow vest" anti-Macron demonstrations.

Thousands of police officers marched in Paris Wednesday for better working conditions, a rare protest that took place against the backdrop of a spike in police suicides -- 52 so far this year.

But the police has also been a recurring target of terrorist groups, such as Daesh, behind a wave of attacks in France since 2015, from large synchronized assaults to isolated knife and gun attacks.

In January 2015, two police officers were among 12 people killed when gunmen stormed the Paris offices of satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo. A day later, a policewoman was shot dead in southern Paris.

In June 2016, a police couple were stabbed to death in their home in a suburb west of Paris by a man claiming allegiance to Daesh, who broadcast the attack live on Facebook.

And in April 2017, a man opened fire on a police van on the Champs-Elysees in Paris, killing an officer and wounding two others along with a pedestrian.