Interior Minister Gerard Collomb said on France-Inter radio Tuesday that the assailant had Italian residency and a valid Tunisian passport. The attacker was killed by soldiers after Sunday's stabbings, which were claimed by the Islamic State group.
Collomb urged more information-sharing among governments about such cases.
One of the seven IDs the attacker used in previous encounters with French police was a Tunisian passport identifying him as Ahmed H. A judicial official said today that authorities have determined that is the Marseille attacker's true identity.
The area-Aprilia, Latina and Fondi-has already seen four people expelled from Italy for alleged radicalization-related reasons, La Repubblica said.
Citing state security, Italy has since 2015 expelled more than 200 people who are suspected of radicalizing others or recruiting would-be jihadis, offenses that wouldn't necessarily hold up in court but which the Interior Ministry uses as reason to expel them.
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