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‘Wolf in sheep’s clothing’: Yassin Salhi pinned boss’s severed head to factory fence in France

Salhi caught the attention of intelligence authorities in 2005 and 2006 because he was socialising with a group of people associated with radical Islam.

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Members of France's Special Forces leave an apartment building after arresting Yassin Salhi. Photo: AFP

Yassin Salhi was a quiet man with a job, a family and no criminal record before he allegedly launched a grisly assault at an industrial gas factory in France and pinned his boss’s severed head to the fence on Friday.

While authorities had investigated the married 35-year-old father of three for ties to the radical Salafist movement, he was never identified as participating in terrorist activities and never convicted of a crime.

A co-worker of Salhi’s said he was mysterious, possessed of a quiet strength and deceptively calm.

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“He was a wolf in sheep’s clothing,” Abdel Karim told RTL radio.

“He had already talked to me about Daesh,” said Karim using one of the names for the Islamic State group.

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It was “not to indoctrinate me into anything, but simply to ask me my opinion. When I told him what I thought, from that day on, it was ’Hello/goodbye.’”

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