Paris shooting gunman was arrested in FEBRUARY for threatening to kill police – after serving 15 years for previous cop attacks – and released after he claimed Scream masks and hunting knives found on him were for ‘a carnival’
QUESTIONS today began to emerge about why an ISIS gunman who shot a cop dead in Paris was free to carry out his attack.
Karim Cheurfi, 39, killed traffic cop Xavier Jugele, 37, and injured two more after opening fire with a Kalashnikov on the the Champs-Elysées last night.
He had been jailed for trying to kill two policemen and this year was found with knives and masks he claimed was for a carnival.
Details have since emerged of how the Islamist had only two months earlier been questioned by cops about threats to kill a police officer.
He was taken into custody on February 23 of this year and his home was searched. Hunting knives and masks from the film Scream were found.
But Paris prosecutor Francois Molins said: "These elements were not sufficient to provide proof that he wanted to carry out a threat of assassination. For example, he said the masks were for a local carnival."
It has also emerged the killer was jailed for 20 years in 2001 for trying to kill two policemen - but only served 15.
ISIS claimed responsibility for the attack after the killer got out of a car next to a parked police van and opened fire through the window before officers returned fire and shot him dead.
Traffic officer Jugele was today named as the policeman killed in the shooting. A female foreign tourist was also wounded.
Jugele, 37, had been caught up in the city’s 2015 Bataclan Theatre massacre where 90 died.
He had said when it reopened: “We’re here to say no to terrorists.”
He was shot in the head when Cheurfi pulled up in an old grey Audi, leapt out and opened fire on cops near a police van.
Passers-by fled as the killer was shot dead by police.
Cops have since raided his Chelles home in the hunt for clues about accomplices.
Weapons including a hunting rifle and knives were found in his car along with a Koran, the addresses of intelligence agents and details on a police chief.
A note defending ISIS was also found next to his body.
The terror group has since claimed responsibility for the attack and named the gunman using his alias Abu Yousif al-Belgiki - Arabic for 'The Belgian'.
Cheurfi was previously jailed for 20 years for shooting at cops after he was caught driving a stolen car in Roissy-en-Brie in 2001.
But he was released early following an appeal ruling.
Police said he had been detained in February after threatening police but freed soon after.
French cops investigated him over reports that he had been talking about killing police officers and was getting weapons.
He was found to have hunting knives, masks and a GoPro camera in his possession but this was not thought sufficient proof of his deadly plans.
Cheurfi was born on New Year's Eve in 1977 in the Livry-Gargan suburb in Paris' north east.
A repeat offender, he had been jailed four times for attempted murder, violence and theft.
In April of 2001 the killer shot a plain clothes policeman while driving a stolen car.
He was caged for that offence and emerged from prison in October 2015, five years earlier than he was sentenced to.
A neighbour said: “He was a lost soul. He did not pray, he drank and watched jihadist propaganda.”
This morning a Belgian man French cops said they were also hunting in connection with the attack handed himself into a police station in Antwerp.