LONDON (Reuters) - The perpetrator of the attack on Paris police headquarters Mikael Harpoon had access to protected files containing the identities of policemen tucked into Salafi mosques, the magazine said.

She pointed out that this disturbing information revealed by the newspaper, "La Cannar Ancini" satirical, made the highest quarters wonder whether this militant policeman who killed four of his comrades, shared this information.

The magazine said that Harpoon had access to protected files because of his job, where in recent days it turned out that he was an information expert in the Intelligence Directorate at the police headquarters, and that he had a secret defense permit.

"If he is able to access our list of sources that have been tucked into Salafi mosques, there is a risk that weeping will rise again because of the violence," a senior intelligence officer said.

Sure
According to a number of police officers interviewed by Lukanar Achini, one thing was certain: the policeman had "access to everything, from computers to access codes to correspondence".

Indeed, investigators found at his workplace a USB device containing propaganda videos of the Islamic State, as well as "personal data of dozens of colleagues at the police headquarters," Le Parisien reported.

In response to questions from the legal committee, Interior Minister Christophe Kastner said that many of the "imbalances" had left Mikael Harpoon running through the network holes, although there were several signs of extremism. Of the secret defense permit.

Police officer Mikael Harpoon, who has been working in the Intelligence Directorate at the police headquarters in Paris since 2003, killed four police officers, while the fifth victim, who was discharged from hospital, survived the treatment.