The FBI on Friday identified the man who died after driving a burning van loaded with propane tanks and gasoline canisters onto Travis Air Force Base in California this week as Hafiz Kazi.

But the FBI said Kazi’s intentions and motive for the bizarre incident remain a mystery, and it has not yet found any connection to terrorism.

“Now the question is, why?” Sean Ragan, special agent in charge of the FBI’s field office in Sacramento, said in a news conference Friday afternoon. “Why did this individual end up at the front gate of Travis Air Base, on fire, and now deceased? And we don't have the answers to that.”

Investigators found five propane tanks, three plastic one-gallon gasoline cans, three phones, and several lighters in the van, as well as a gym bag with personal items.

Ragan said agents found one video on a phone that was of no real substance. He said agents found no “jihadi-type” videos suggesting a connection to or affinity for terrorism.

The FBI now knows of no threats to the base or the Solano County community, he said.

Ragan said that Kazi was originally from India and has been living in the United States as a legal permanent resident since about 1993.

Ragan said that Kazi is believed to have spent most of his time in the U.S. living in the San Francisco Bay area, though investigators are still looking into specifically where he has lived most recently, and in the past. He previously worked as a cab driver, Ragan said, though it is unknown if he still held that job at the time of his death.

Investigators are also piecing together his life and what led up to the event to figure out his motive, Ragan said. Agents have identified some of his associates and are interviewing them, he said. They also are reviewing his social media, emails, and the phones found in the van.

The FBI has not yet found any of Kazi’s family members in the United States, though agents have found one relative in India and notified the relative of Kazi’s death.

It is not yet known what killed Kazi, Ragan said, and the Solano County Sheriff’s coroner is conducting an autopsy to determine the cause of death.

As Kazi’s van approached the main gate at Travis at about 7 p.m. Wednesday, Ragan said, flames could be seen coming from inside. The van went through the initial checkpoint, veered off and crashed.

First responders tried to rescue Kazi, who appeared to be on fire, but the doors were locked and could not be opened. He died at the scene.

No shots were fired, and the incident was first believed to be an accident, Ragan said.

Officers from the nearby Fairfield Police Department and the Air Force Office of Special Investigations arrived on the scene and saw propane tanks inside the van. At that point, the FBI was called in, as were Air Force explosive ordnance disposal technicians.

Videos of the burning car were posted on the unofficial Facebook page Air Force amn/nco/snco.

The late driver was eventually identified through his fingerprints, but he was so badly burned that investigators were unable to identify him immediately after his death.

Stephen Losey is the air warfare reporter for Defense News. He previously covered leadership and personnel issues at Air Force Times, and the Pentagon, special operations and air warfare at Military.com. He has traveled to the Middle East to cover U.S. Air Force operations.

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