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Suspect's gun jammed during airport shootings

The pistol used by the suspect in the slaying of two U.S. airmen at the Frankfurt airport malfunctioned during the attack, a German investigator said Friday.
Image: A bullet hole is seen in the driver's window as the bus is towed away after a gunman fired shots at U.S. soldiers
A bullet hole is seen in the driver's window as a bus is towed away after a gunman fired shots at U.S. soldiers who were traveling outside Frankfurt airport, Germany, on Wednesday.Michael Probst / AP
/ Source: NBC, msnbc.com and news services

U.S. Senior Airman Nicholas J. Alden was standing outside of a bus at Frankfurt airport when a young man first asked him for a cigarette, then whether he was bound for Afghanistan.

When Alden answered yes, the man fatally shot him, point blank, in the back of the head, then stormed aboard the bus shouting "Allah Akbar" — Arabic for "God is great." He shot and killed Airman 1st Class Zachary R. Cuddeback, who was at the wheel, then shot and injured two others, German authorities said Friday.

The gunman, identified as Arid Uka, a 21-year-old Kosovo Albanian, then pointed his FN 9mm pistol at yet another airman seated on the bus. "He pointed his pistol at his head and pulled the trigger twice, but the pistol jammed and no shots came out," prosecutor Rainer Griesbaum told reporters in Karlsruhe.

Jammed, empty shell casings prevented the weapon from firing again.

Uka, who was raised and schooled in Germany, refused to speak Thursday when brought before a judge and formally charged with two counts of murder and three counts of attempted murder.

But shortly after the attack, he told police that he had taken the weapon and two knives to the airport specifically to kill Americans "as revenge for the American mission in Afghanistan," Griesbaum said.

"Preliminary evaluations and evidence show it was the act of an Islamist-inspired single perpetrator," Griesbaum said. "There is no evidence at the moment the act was coordinated with others or that he was a member of a terrorist organization."

Uka said a YouTube video he saw the day before the incident allegedly showing a brutal raid on a home by U.S. soldiers in Afghanistan had inspired him to prevent what he considered "further atrocities."

When he saw the busload of 16 airmen parked outside Terminal 2 awaiting transport to the nearby Ramstein Air Base, he approached Alden, 25, from South Carolina, who was assigned to the 48th Security Forces Squadron at RAF Lakenheath in England.

Cuddeback, 21, hailed from Virginia and was assigned to the 86th Vehicle Readiness Squadron at Ramstein Air Base in Germany. He was the only airman in uniform. The others were dressed in civilian cloths.

After his weapon jammed, Uka fled, authorities say. The 22-year-old airman he last tried to shoot chased him into the airport terminal, where he and police overpowered the attacker.

German authorities believe that Uka only recently radicalized and that he acted alone — but Griesbaum said the incident shows there is a serious danger from what he called "virtual jihad," or those attracted to extremism through the Internet, not part of a radical network. "It underscores the danger of Islamists acting alone," he said.

Police said Uka was shy, had few friends and appeared to get his ideas not from mosque attendance or personal contact but from the Internet. He had not been observed at any of the mosques that police keep under surveillance, they said.

Police said they have not been able to identify the video he said had inspired him to violence, or whether such a video exists.

Griesbaum said the case underscored the threat from Internet extremism but added that the investigations could be slow and painstaking: "Gathering the evidence is extremely difficult."

The two U.S. airmen who were wounded have not been identified, and one of them remained hospitalized in critical condition on Friday.

Germany's Bild newspaper said Uka worked as a "sorter" for German postal service at Frankfurt Airport, NBC News reported.

Bild quoted spokesman Stefan Hess as saying that they "were very happy with his work" and that he had a short-term contract which was due to finish at the end of the month.

Another spokesman, Dirk Klasen, was quoted as saying that a background check had been conducted before Uka was hired, but there were no "abnormalities."