Machete-wielding man shot in airport for spraying insecticide at passengers in airport

A machete-wielding man sprayed wasp killer at airport staff and passengers in New Orleans international before being shot by authorities.

Richard White, 62, walked up to the airport security checkpoint, pulled out a can of insecticide and began spraying agents and passengers standing in line, according to police.

He then pulled a machete from the waistband of his trousers and began swinging it around him.

A Transport Security Administration (TSA) agent blocked the machete with a piece of luggage as White ran through a metal detector, Jefferson Parish Sheriff Newell Normand said.

After running through the detector, White was chasing a female TSA agent when Jefferson Parish Sheriff's Office Lt Heather Slyve drew her weapon.

White continued to swing the machete as she approached, so she fired three rounds, striking him in the face, chest and leg, Normand said. A TSA agent was also struck in the arm by a bullet, he said.

White was still alive and in surgery at a hospital, Normand said.

Some bystanders scrambling to get out of the way received minor cuts and bruises, the sheriff said.

Brett Leonard, whose flight from San Francisco landed in New Orleans shortly before the attack, says passengers in the baggage claim area had no indication of what happened until they walked outside after picking up their bags.

He says dozens of police cars were parked outside the terminal with lights flashing, and a nearby police officer told him that someone had attacked a TSA officer moments before.

Leonard said he was put into a cab with several strangers as police tried to evacuate the area.

"It was just very confusing - we didn't know what was going on. No alarm, no announcement, just word of mouth," Leonard said.

 

Normand said investigators were trying to determine what White was doing at the airport. He said it did not appear that he was trying to get on a plane.

Authorities later found White's car outside the terminal and were searching it, said police Col. John Fortunato.