New York terror attack: Authorities struggle to prevent attacks with rented trucks

Terror attacks using trucks a deadly trend

ATLANTA -- It doesn't take a firearm or a bomb to wreak havoc. All it takes is a driver's license, a valid credit card, some proof of insurance -- and as little as $19. 

The attack on a riverfront bike path in New York City was carried out with a pickup truck that home contractors or do-it-yourself handymen can get with no background check and little worry it will raise red flags among law enforcement. 

Eight people were killed and 12 seriously injured in the Tuesday afternoon attack when, authorities say, Sayfullo Saipov, a 29-year-old from Uzbekistan, barreled along the path for more than a dozen blocks. 

Angela Hrdlicka, a former Secret Service agent who is now a private security consultant, said for the attackers, the rentals are a perfect recipe to carry out attacks: easy to get, cheap and with virtually no vetting. 

"It's easy to do and it's very, very difficult to defend against," she said. 

A damaged Home Depot truck remains on the scene Wednesday, Nov. 1, 2017, after the driver mowed down people on a riverfront bike path near the World Trade Center on Tuesday in New York. Mark Lennihan / AP

 Home Depot officials said in an email to The Associated Press that it does not screen renters. All of its stores require a valid driver's license, insurance information and a credit card deposit. Other rental companies, including Hertz, Enterprise and U-Haul, mention similar guidelines on their websites. In most cases, the cost to rent a truck from Home Depot or U-Haul is much cheaper than a rental car. 

Matthew Harrigan, a Home Depot spokesman, said there's no thought at this time to change how the company vets people who rent their vehicles. 

Security experts say once a determined attacker has a vehicle, cities are full of potential targets.

"You can't put barriers up everywhere there are pedestrians. This is virtually impossible to stop, which is why the terrorists are so attracted to it," former CIA Deputy Director Mike Morell said on "CBS This Morning."

John Miller, deputy commissioner for New York City Police, said Wednesday that authorities are working to put together a timeline of Saipov's whereabouts leading up to the attack. Miller said Saipov rented a pickup truck from a Home Depot in Passaic, New Jersey, shortly after 2 p.m. Tuesday. The attack began just an hour later.

New York City has a program called "Project Shield" in which law enforcement works with businesses to help identify potential threats. It wasn't immediately known if the store where Saipov rented the vehicle had been one of those visited by authorities. So far in this case, Miller said, "there was certainly nothing unusual enough to cause anybody to call." 

Vehicles have been used in scores of terror attacks around the world, including the July 2016 attack in Nice, France, when a large cargo truck drove into a crowd on a promenade, killing 86 people. In March, a Hyundai sedan rammed into a crowd on Westminster Bridge in London, killing five. 

Such attacks come right out of the "ISIS playbook," security experts say.

"Several months ago ISIS published in an extremist magazine the following: Get a truck, kill as many pedestrians as you possibly can. When you can't kill any more pedestrians, get out and either with a knife or gun, kill more and then let people know either through a note or through the words you say that you're doing this on behalf of ISIS," Morell said.

In the United States, terrorists used a rented Ryder van to detonate a bomb in a garage at the World Trade Center in 1993. And in 1995, a rented Ryder truck was used by Timothy McVeigh and Terry Nichols in the Oklahoma City bombing that killed 168. 

For those using the vehicle itself as a weapon, "It doesn't have to be a big vehicle," Hrdlicka said. "You can mow down just as many people almost with a minivan and a crowd like that. If you started making them do background checks on rental vehicles they could just steal one or borrow their neighbors or use their own personal vehicle. That's not going to fix the potential risk." 

Anthony Schilling, an adjunct professor of homeland security at the University of New Hampshire who's been involved in security since the 1970s, called it the nightmare scenario in a lone wolf attack. Vehicles are easy to rent and aren't subject to deep background investigations. "Even if you have a record, you can still rent a vehicle." 

Bruce Alexander, a security and terrorism expert, said the World Trade Center and Oklahoma City bombings proved decades ago how easy it is to use these vehicles for destructive purposes. Those attacks helped raise awareness about the easy ways one can "weaponize" commonly available tools. But there's always a balancing act when it comes to security measures. 

Companies want to ensure the customer's experience is as easy and simple as possible, and that vetting of customers is time- and cost-effective. 

"It is very difficult to come up with a workable cost-effective model that also fits within the constraints of civil liberties and is also practical from a business standpoint," Alexander said.

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