Metropolitan Police
Assistant Commissioner Mark Rowley said Butt was known to the security
services, but there was no evidence of "attack planning".
The brother of one of the
terrorists was a soldier, according to the Daily Mail.
Two of the London Bridge
terrorists have been named by Scotland Yard as Khuram Shazad Butt and Rachid
Redouane, both from Barking.
The killer, 27, found his
brother dead aged twelve, and it has been suggested he was traumatised at this
young age.
His brother, however,
volunteered for the Army Reserves.
Counter terrorism police
have made two fresh raids on addresses in east London in connection with
Saturday's deadly terror attack in London.
The Metropolitan Police
said officers entered properties in Newham and Barking at 4.15am on Monday and
"a number" of people had been detained.
Searches were continuing at
both addresses, police added.
Residents reported hearing
"loud flash bangs and gunshots" in the early hours of Monday morning.
Terrorists brought carnage
to the streets of Britain for the second time in as many weeks, killing seven
and leaving 21 fighting for their lives.
Pedestrians were mowed down
by a van on London Bridge before attackers stabbed a police officer and
revellers around Borough Market with 12-inch knives.
One of the attackers
shouted "this is for Allah" as he knifed a man near a pub - while the
Islamic State militant group claimed its fighters carried out the attack.
The group is said to have
urged extremists to run over civilians in a poster released over the weekend
featuring a knife, handgun and lorry urging radicals to "gain benefit from
Ramadan".
The three men, wearing fake
suicide bomb vests, were shot dead by eight officers outside a pub after police
opened fire with an "unprecedented" hail of 50 bullets, while a
bystander was also shot.
Officers say they know the
identities of the men who carried out the attack and will release the names
"as soon as operationally possible".
Scotland Yard said seven
women and five men aged between 19 and 60 were arrested under the Terrorism Act
in Barking on Sunday. A 55-year-old man was later released without charge.
A vigil will be held on
Monday evening near London Bridge in honour of the victims of the attack, which
took place at around 10pm, while a minute's silence will take place at 11am on
Tuesday.
Rot in hell
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