Machete-wielding man shot by police dies in hospital
KENNER, La. -- A machete-wielding man who was shot during a bizarre rampage at New Orleans' international airport died Saturday afternoon, shortly after authorities revealed that he had also been carrying a bag of Molotov cocktails when the melee began.
Richard White, 63, had been shot Friday night as he chased an unarmed Transportation Security Administration agent through a concourse full of frightened travelers -- and in the direction of a sheriff's deputy, who drew her gun and fired three times.
The Jefferson Parish Sheriff's Office confirmed to CBS News that White was pronounced dead at 4:02 p.m. at Interim LSU Hospital in New Orleans.
Earlier, Sheriff Newell Normand said investigators discovered after the shooting that White had been carrying a bag loaded with Molotov cocktails: six Mason jars with cloth wicks soaked in gasoline.
There was also a barbecue lighter and a letter opener in the bag, Normand said at a news conference at the Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport. Residue from smoke bombs was also found near White's body. White had dropped the bag during the attack.
"Had he made it down the concourse, who knows," Normand told reporters.
The sheriff said White had a history of mental health problems but investigators were trying to determine the nature and extent of those problems. His family has been cooperating with the investigation.
White was a Jehovah's Witness and had refused "certain types of medical care," Normand said.
"Fortunately, he didn't seriously injure anybody," Normand said.
Authorities also found smoke bombs and tanks of acetylene, Freon and oxygen in the trunk of his car, Normand said, but investigators didn't know what, if anything, White intended to do with the materials. Normand said White is believed to be a former taxi driver, but added that investigators are still examining a variety of sources and databases to obtain his employment and criminal history.
Normand said White sprayed the unarmed Transportation Security Administration agents and several passengers in line at the checkpoint with wasp killer. He then drew a large machete from the waistband of his pants. A male TSA agent blocked the machete with a piece of luggage as White ran through a metal detector.
"This guy comes running with a machete over his head, swinging it through security, and then he hops a bench and comes toward my wife and I, and I start swinging my suitcase at him, and he runs the other way, right into a TSA agent," passenger Mike Cross told CBS New Orleans affiliate WWL-TV.
White chased TSA agent Carroll Richel while swinging the machete. They were heading toward Lt. Heather Slyve of the Jefferson Parish Sheriff's Office, who drew her weapon and fired three times as White quickly gained ground on Richel, Normand said.
One bullet is believed to have gone through Richel's right upper arm and hit White. Richel credited Slyve with saving her life.
"Officer Slyve is my hero," Richel said.
New Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu said a review of security procedures will follow, adding that such is standard after any emergency.
Normand, Landrieu and TSA Acting Administrator Mel Carraway addressed reporters during a news conference at the airport, which is owned by the city of New Orleans but located in the city of Kenner in neighboring Jefferson Parish. They praised the work of TSA officials who helped usher passengers away from the unfolding danger, as well as the law enforcement officials providing security and investigating the incident.
Normand said the situation could have been much worse.
"You know, sometimes, the saying: You'd rather be lucky than good. I think we were both last night to the nth degree," Normand said. "I think we did a lot of things right and positive and caused certain things to happen, but by the same token -- one second here, one second there -- it could have been a much different outcome."
Ron Hicks, who was preparing to fly home after a vacation in New Orleans, told WWL-TV he was standing in the TSA line in front of White about 8 p.m. Friday. He said White raced toward the TSA agent at the front of the line and began spraying wasp spray.
Hicks, who witnessed the entire incident, said White seemed intent on attacking TSA agents, not passengers, and appeared disturbed.
"How do you explain crazy?" Hicks said.
One of White's former neighbors, who said the man's nickname is "Richy Rich," told the New Orleans Advocate that she ran into him days earlier while shopping and nothing seemed out of the ordinary.
"I was totally shocked to hear that was Richard," said Donna Jackson, who lives across the street from White's last known address in Kenner. "I just saw him, and this week he's doing something like this?"
Jackson described White as a "kind" man who would often visit her and her family at their home. The visits would sometimes last hours, she said, with White trying to convince Jackson to get off her diabetes medications and use herbal remedies instead.
"He was kind, he would help you," Jackson said. "My prayers go out to his wife and his family. They have my deepest condolences."