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US to release 'limited transcripts' of Orlando killer’s talks with police

Omar Mateen's pledge of allegiance to Islamic State group and views of US policies will not be included
US Attorney General Loretta Lynch (AFP)

US authorities will release "limited transcripts" on Monday of Orlando gunman Omar Mateen and police negotiators' telephone conversations during his attack at a gay nightclub that left 49 people dead, Attorney General Loretta Lynch said on Sunday.

Lynch said the conversations included Mateen's pledge of allegiance to the Islamic State group, and his views of US policy.

But those statements will not be included in the transcripts released to the public, she said.

Omar Mateen

"What we're not going to do is further this man's propaganda," she said on NBC's Meet the Press. "We're not going to hear him make his assertions of allegiance."

On CNN's State of the Union, Lynch said the transcripts would cover only portions of the telephone exchanges with police negotiators so as "to avoid re-victimising those who went through this horror".

Mateen, a 29-year-old security guard armed with a semi-automatic rifle and a handgun, stormed into the Pulse nightclub on 12 June in Orlando, Florida, raking the crowd with gunfire.

The attack then turned into a three hour hostage-taking that ended with a police SWAT team retaking the venue by force and shooting Mateen dead

Mateen, described by his ex-wife as physically abusive and given to fits of anger, appears to have had mixed-up motives.

His father said Mateen had been upset at the sight of a gay couple kissing, but other witnesses said he had been a repeat patron at Pulse and used gay dating apps.

What we're not going to do is further this man's propaganda - Loretta Lynch

Alongside that was a history of FBI investigations into him for possible militant radicalisation.

Lynch called the Orlando massacre "an act of terrorism and an act of hate, targeted against a community, the LGBT community, the Latino community".

However, she told CNN that Mateen did not get into his feelings about gays in his exchanges with police.

"So we're still exploring why he chose this particular place to attack," she said.

Lynch said she will travel to Orlando on Tuesday to get an on-the-ground perspective on the investigation, ABC News reported.

“I’ll be meeting with the victims, the first responders, talking about the ways we are going to be supporting the victims and the first responders and also operationally," she said. "We will be releasing more information about this investigation as it comes to light."

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