Paris: A man who stabbed four persons to death at police headquarters in Paris on October 3 adhered to a radical version of Islam, anti-terrorist prosecutors said.
Mickael Harpon had contact with members of the Salafist movement, media reported on Sunday quoting prosecutor Jean-Francois Ricard.
He had exchanged text messages of a religious nature with his wife before Thursday's attack, the prosecutor said.
He also defended the deadly 2015 attack on the magazine Charlie Hebdo and other atrocities, Ricard said.
Anti-terror investigators took over the inquiry on Friday. It was initially regarded as a criminal matter.
The 45-year-old IT expert, who worked at the police headquarters, was shot dead on Thursday by a junior police officer after he attacked colleagues in several offices at the central police building.
Harpon had converted to Islam and had been in contact with the Salafist movement, Ricard said, in reference to the ultra-conservative Islamic ideology.
The attacker 'agreed with certain atrocities committed in the name of that religion', he said.