German authorities search garages over alleged plans for chemical attack

Two men were detained on Saturday night in Castrop-Rauxel following a tip from US security officials

Material is removed from the garages by German authorities. Photograph: DPA via AP
Material is removed from the garages by German authorities. Photograph: DPA via AP

German investigators have searched two garages used by an Iranian man arrested on suspicion of planning an attack with deadly chemicals.

The 32-year-old suspect and his 25-year-old brother were detained on Saturday night in Castrop-Rauxel, in western Germany, following a tip from US security officials.

Authorities say the men are suspected of planning a serious attack motivated by Islamic extremism, for which at least one of them had allegedly sought to obtain the potent toxins cyanide and ricin.

A court in Dortmund ordered the pair kept in custody pending a possible indictment, prosecutors in Düsseldorf said.

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The men are suspected of conspiracy to murder, a charge that can carry a prison sentence of three to 15 years.

Prosecutors said on Sunday that an initial search of the elder suspect’s home turned up no toxic substances.

On Monday, they said they have discovered that he used two garages in the back yard of a house in Castrop-Rauxel, and they were being searched with help from analysts trained to deal with possible dangerous substances.

It was not yet clear how far advanced the plans for any alleged attack were and whether the suspects had picked a specific target. – Associated Press