A 63-year-old man attacked US Transportation Security Administration (TSA) officers with wasp spray and a machete on Friday night before he was shot by a law enforcement officer at a security gate to a busy concourse at Louis Armstrong International Airport outside New Orleans, the authorities said.
Jefferson Parish Sheriff Newell Normand identified the man as Richard White, who had worked as a taxi driver, and said he did not know what had set off the attack.
A little before 8pm, White pulled a can of wasp spray out of a paper bag and began to spray one TSA officer and then another, the sheriff said. Then, with his other hand, he drew a machete from his pants and began swinging it wildly at the officers. One officer tried to defend himself with a piece of luggage as White chased him and others through the metal detector, Normand said.
As they turned a corner back into the terminal, a deputy with the Jefferson Parish Sheriff’s Office who was stationed by the security gates drew her pistol and fired three shots at White, hitting him in the face, chest and thigh. One of the shots hit another TSA officer who had been fleeing White, the sheriff said.
Six people were treated at the scene by emergency personnel, and four were taken to a hospital, only one of them — the attacker — with serious wounds, according to Jeffrey Elder, director of New Orleans emergency services.
Normand said White was undergoing surgery. The TSA officer who was hit by a bullet was being treated for wounds that were not considered life-threatening.
A Sheriff’s Office spokesman said White lived in Kenner, Louisiana, the suburb where the airport is. His car was found parked outside the terminal and was checked by a bomb squad, he said. Law enforcement officers have been interviewing White’s family.
The incident was brief, but it rattled passengers.
“First somebody said, ‘Get down, get down, get down’, then ‘bam, bam, bam,’” 62-year-old Reginald McKamie said, mimicking the sound of rapid gunfire. He was on his way home to Houston, Texas, to see a Stevie Wonder concert.
Farah Stockman, a columnist for the Boston Globe, emerged from the bathroom just after the police shot White and saw him lying face down in a pool of blood with “a very large knife lying near his head.”
“It was very chaotic,” she said in a telephone interview. “People in the terminal were crying, people were cowering in bathroom stalls crying, because they didn’t know what was going on.”
Everybody in Concourse B lay on the ground for several tense minutes after the attack, McKamie said, before people began to cautiously stand up and investigate what had happened. They soon dived for the floor again, though.
“Five minutes later someone yelled ‘Get down’ again,” said Nicole Danjean, 46, who was headed to Washington. She said passengers ducked for cover wherever they could, some even rushing down nearby jetways to hide.
However, it was a false alarm, set off in the panicked airport by the sight of a woman fainting.
The authorities herded passengers out of the concourse through the security gates, and the flights were moved to other concourses. Several said they saw a shirtless man being treated for a wound to his shoulder blades and an older man with a wounded ankle.
White lay several feet from passengers who were being escorted out of the concourse across a security area littered with abandoned luggage and scattered personal effects.
Freddie Smith, 22, said the airport looked as if it had been “ransacked.”
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