The Latest: Swedish police haul away truck used in attack
Swedish investigators have removed the hijacked beer truck from the Stockholm department store where it ran into a crowd of pedestrians in what the prime minister says is an act of terrorism.
Government offices in Sweden will fly flags at half-mast Saturday to honor the victims of a hijacked beer truck that plowed into pedestrians at a Stockholm department store.
Four people were killed and 15 more were wounded Friday in what the prime minister has called a terrorist attack.
Swedish Prime Minister Stefan Lofven has laid a bouquet of red roses and lit a candle near the department store in Stockholm where a hijacked beer trucked crashed on a busy shopping street, killing four people and wounding 15 others.
Lofven briefly spoke to a police officer at the site, who said the prime minister was "saddened" by what he is calling a terror attack.
Swedish broadcaster SVT says forensic police have entered the stolen truck to search for evidence.
The news comes as Swedish police launched a nationwide manhunt for the person or persons who drove a stolen beer truck down a pedestrian street in the Swedish capital and crashed it into a department store Friday afternoon.
Swedish police have launched a nationwide manhunt for the person or persons who drove a stolen beer truck down a pedestrian street in Stockholm and crashed it into a department store Friday afternoon.
Sweden's national theater, Dramaten, located a stone's throw from where a hijacked beer truck crashed into an upscale department store, has canceled three plays Friday evening.
Swedish Prime Minister Stefan Lofven has described the crash as a terror attack and says it killed at least two people.
Danish Prime Minister Lars Loekke Rasmussen says the truck crash that killed at least two people in neighboring Stockholm "is a cowardly attempt to subdue us and the peaceful way we live in Scandinavia."
Swedish police have launched a nationwide manhunt for the person