New details are emerging about Sayfullo Saipov (left and right) who mowed down more than a dozen innocent people on a New York City bike path on Tuesday

The Muslim immigrant from Uzbekistan accused of carrying out Tuesday's terror attack in Manhattan entered court Wednesday evening in a wheelchair, handcuffed and with his feet shackled, to face terrorism charges filed against him by the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York.

Sayfullo Saipov, 29, wore a gray shirt and was surrounded by five guards while in his wheelchair inside a New York federal courthouse after he was charged with providing material support to a terrorist group and committing violence and destruction of motor vehicles.

His lawyers said Wednesday they were not seeking bail and a judge ordered him to be held in federal jail.

Saipov did not enter a plea to terrorism charges and a judge set his next court date for November 15.

Authorities say the Uzbek national watched ISIS videos on his cellphone and picked Halloween for the attack on a bike lane in lower Manhattan because he knew more people would be out on the streets.

Prosecutors said in court papers that Saipov asked to display the ISIS flag in his hospital room where he was recovering from being shot in the stomach by police ending the attack.

Saipov 'stated that he felt good about what he had done,' according to court papers.

The 29-year-old left behind knives and a note, handwritten in Arabic, that included Islamic religious references and said 'it will endure' — a phrase that commonly refers to ISIS, FBI agent Amber Tyree said in court papers.

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The Muslim immigrant from Uzbekistan (above in court sketches) accused of carrying on Tuesday's terror attack in Manhattan entered court Wednesday evening in a wheelchair, handcuffed and with his feet shackled, to face terrorism charges filed against him by the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York

Saipov, 29, wore a gray shirt and was surrounded by five guards while in his wheelchair inside a New York federal courthouse after he was charged with providing material support to a terrorist group and committing violence and destruction of motor vehicles

His lawyers said Wednesday they were not seeking bail and a judge ordered him to be held in federal jail. Saipov did not enter a plea to terrorism charges and a judge set his next court date for November 15

Questioned in his hospital bed, Saipov said he had been inspired by ISIS videos and began plotting an attack about a year ago, deciding to use a truck about two months ago, Tyree said. Saipov even rented a truck on October 22 to practice making turns, Tyree said.

John Miller, deputy New York police commissioner for intelligence, said Saipov 'appears to have followed, almost exactly to a T, the instructions that ISIS has put out.'

In the past few years, the Islamic State has exhorted followers online to use vehicles, knives or other close-at-hand means of killing people in their home countries. England, France and Germany have all seen deadly vehicle attacks since mid-2016.

A November 2016 issue of the group's online magazine detailed features that an attack truck or van should have, suggested renting such a vehicle and recommended targeting crowded streets and outdoor gatherings, according to the SITE Intelligence Group, a militant-monitoring agency.

Saipov told authorities, according to the compliant, he chose Halloween for the attack because he thought there would be more civilians nearby.

Carlos Batista, a neighbor of Saipov's in Paterson, New Jersey, said he had seen the suspect and two friends using the same model of rented truck several times in the past three weeks.

Overnight, FBI investigators raided Saipov's Paterson, New Jersey apartment, where he lives with his wife and three kids, the youngest of whom is three months old

It's unclear how long Saipov has lived at the address in New Jersey, he seemed to float between Ohio, Florida and New Jersey

A member of the media knocks on the door next to Saipov's apartment on Wednesday

An FBI investigator carries a bag of evidence away from Saipov's home on Wednesday

Trump tweeted Wednesday night that he spoke with the president of Argentina about the five victims who died in the attack on Tuesday

He also tweeted that the US 'will be immediately implementing much tougher Extreme Vetting Procedures'

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo told CNN on Wednesday that Saipov 'radicalized domestically' after moving to America seven years ago, where he had worked as a commercial truck driver and Uber driver.

Reports say that Saipov attended a 'suspicious' New Jersey mosque.

Saipov married in 2013 and has since fathered three children - the youngest of whom is three months old. Overnight, FBI agents raided the couple's Paterson, New Jersey home.

On October 28, Saipov was spotted on the George Washington Bridge, the crossing at the far northern tip of the island between New Jersey and New York.

That same day, his EZ-pass recorded him driving through the Holland Tunnel (which also links New Jersey and New York) twice. The Holland Tunnel is located in lower Manhattan, near where Saipov started his rampage on Tuesday.

Prosecutors released the criminal complaint (above) against Saipov on Wednesday afternoon which describes the charges he's been hit with for Tuesday's deadly attack

Saipov was charged with providing material support to a terrorist group and committing violence and destruction of motor vehicles

The documents also provide details into the background on ISIS as a foreign terrorist organization

The documents say ISIS has 'disseminated a wide variety of recruiting materials and propaganda through social media'

The suspect seemingly lived a quiet life prior to moving to the U.S.

He had spent most of his life living in a single apartment with his parents and three younger sisters in Tashkent, the capital of Uzbekistan, Radio Free Europe (RFE) reports.

Two neighbors back in Tashkent told RFE that the Saipov family were 'very secular' and 'ordinary Uzbeks who don't stand out in any particular respect'.

'His parents are far from religion,' one of them said, 'They don't even pray.'

Saipov's father, 52-year-old Habibullo, and mother, 50-year-old Muqaddas, run a small clothing stand in their local bazaar, and are relatively well off in their country, owning their own car and home.

The complaint details the deadly attack on Tuesday afternoon in lower Manhattan and also what was found inside the rented Home Depot truck. One of those items was a document that contained Arabic and English text

The complaint also shows a photo showing Saipov at the Home Depot in Passaic, New Jersey renting the truck used in the horrific attack

Saipov was read his Miranda Rights while in the hospital after being shot by an NYPD officer. He waived those rights and began speaking to investigators about what he admitted to doing, according to the complaint

The Uzbek national also said that he was inspired to carry out the attack by ISIS videos he had watched on his cell phone, according to the complaint

Authorities say one of the cellphones found in Saipov's possession contained 90 videos of ISIS-related propaganda

At the age of 22, Saipov moved alone to the U.S. after winning a greencard through the Diversity Visa Lottery.

But a police source in Tashkent told RFE that Saipov lived for a time in Osh, Kyrgyzstan - a city that saw violent ethnic clashes in 1990 and 2010 - before immigrating to the U.S. (DailyMail.com learned that Saipov has close links to Osh, according to Ruslan Leviev, head of the Conflict Intelligence Team, an anti-Kremlin social media monitoring group. He has social media links to friends in the city, also the home of Akbarjon Djalilov, who bombed the St Petersburg metro last year.)

When he first moved to the U.S., acquaintances said that he did not appear to be a 'religious person'. Several years later though, they say he became 'aggressive' and started expressing 'very radical views,' according to sources who spoke to RFE.

Since immigrating, Saipov has lived in multiple states - with addresses in Ohio, Florida and New Jersey. There's some confusion about where Saipov lived when, and for how long, since it appears he moved around frequently.

It's possible that Saipov, working as a trucker, split his time between the three states.

Saipov's mosque in Paterson, New Jersey has been under NYPD surveillance since 2005 (pictured above on Wednesday)

While NBC News reported that Saipov got his commercial driver's license in New Jersey in 2010, and later had it transferred to Florida, sources in Ohio say he lived there right after immigrating.

Dilnoza Abdusamatova, 24, told the Washington Post that Saipov stayed with her family in Cincinnati for his first two weeks in the country because their fathers were friends.

'He always used to work,' Dilnoza said told the Cincinnati Enquirer. 'He wouldn't go to parties or anything. He only used to come home and rest and leave and go back to work.'

She said that he cut off contact with them about a year later, when he got married and moved to Florida to work as a truck driver.

Records show that Saipov married fellow-Uzbek Nozima Odilova in Ohio in 2013. She was 19 years old at the time.

Pictured above is Saipov's former apartment building in Tampa, Florida. He also had an address in Fort Myers

TIMELINE OF THE MASSACRE 2:06pm Saipov rents a truck from the Home Depot in Passaic, New Jersey. 2:43pm Cameras on the George Washington Bridge show Saipov crossing into New York City. 3:04pm Cameras outside the Holland Tunnel show Saipov entering the bike lane at West Street and Houston Street at a high rate of speed. Saipov targets bicyclists and pedestrians in the south-bound lane. Eventually, crashing into a school bus at Chambers Street, where gets out and continues to terrorize bystanders. 3:08pm Police receive more than a dozen 911 calls of a truck driver targeting bystanders in the bike lane, crashing into a school bus and getting out waiving a gun. Two officers who were nearby at Stuyvesant High school for an unrelated call respond to the scene and notice Saipov walking around waiving a gun. Officer Bryan Nash, a 28-year-old who has been on the force for five years, shoots Saipov in the abdomen, bringing the rampage to an end. Advertisement

While Dilnoza says that Saipov started his trucking business in Florida, recrods show he actually started both of them in Ohio - going so far as to use her family's home address for registration.

In 2011, he started Sayf Motors in Hamilton County, Ohio.

Two years later, he started another company in Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio - Bright Auto LLC.

Bright Auto LLC is an active carrier registered with the U.S. Department of Transportation. Records show that the trucking company has one truck and one driver. The company said it could not confirm if the suspect had rented the vehicle, but they are cooperating with police.

One fellow Uzbek driver said that Saipov ran into issues working as a truck driver and was a mean-spirited person.

Mirrakhmat Muminov, 38, of Stow, Ohio, portrayed Saipov as an argumentative young man whose work was falling apart and who 'was not happy with his life.'

Muminov said Saipov lost his insurance on his truck after his rates shot up because of a few traffic tickets, and companies stopped hiring him. Muminov said he heard from Saipov's friends that Saipov's truck engine blew up a few months ago in New Jersey.

He also said Saipov would get into arguments with his friends and family, tangling over even small things, such as going to a picnic with the Uzbek community.

'He had the habit of disagreeing with everybody,' Muminov said.

Saipov drove nearly a mile down the Hudson River bike path before his rampage came to an end when he smashed into a school bus

The above graphic shows how Saipov drove off the West Side Highway and onto the Hudson River bike path on Tuesday

But others who knew Saipov had nothing but nice things to say about him - painting a picture of a Jekyll-and-Hyde figure.

Kobiljon Matkarov, 37, said that he met Saipov in Florida about five years ago and they bonded over their shared Uzbek heritage.

'He is very good guy, he is very friendly… he is like little brother… he look at me like big brother,' he told The New York Post.

Matkarov says Saipov even invited him to his wedding in Ohio, but he couldn't attend.

Matkarov visited New York City recently and said that Saipov drove his family to JFK airport as they were leaving.

Saipov was very friendly, he said, and good with children: 'My kids like him too, he is always playing with them. He is playing all the time,' he said - but added that when one of the children asked to take a photo with him, Saipov refused. 'He no like that. He said no,' Matkarov said.

Matkarov said he was shocked by the claim that his friend had murdered and injured more than a dozen people, and that he didn't know of any terrorist connections he may have had.

Matkarov said he knew his friend had been working for Uber in New Jersey, a fact that the ride-sharing company has confirmed.

Uber said in a statement on Tuesday night: 'We are horrified by this senseless of violence. Our hearts are with the victims and their families. We have reached out to law enforcement to provide our full assistance.'

The company said that he had passed a background check by the company and that they are now 'aggressively' reviewing his history with them, although they had not yet found any 'concerning safety reports.'

The company added that he has been banned from the app.

Saipov (seen being taken into custody on Tuesday) immigrated to the U.S. from his native Uzbekistan in March 2010

People who know Saipov's parents back in Uzbekistan say the family is not religious. Saipov seen above moments after mowing down more than a dozen people on a bike path

Saipov is reportedly seen here holding his two fake guns after climbing out of the Home Depot truck. He ran about a block south of the crash before being shot. Records indicate he worked as an Uber driver and a commercial truck driver

Saipov appears to have lived in both Fort Myers and Tampa, Florida. And though he had been living in New Jersey when he was arrested on Tuesday, he had a Florida driver's license on him.

Neighbors at Saipov's Tampa apartment complex told the Daily Beast that Saipov lived in a modest apartment with his wife, kids and an older woman who appeared to be his mother or mother in law.

They said he was often on the road for two weeks at a time because of his job. They said the family also left every summer. The last time they left, the family told neighbors that they were moving to New Jersey because Saipov's job had been transferred.

Neighbor Melissa Matthews says the women of the household wore head scarves and were cold to her.

'Most people you say hello to and they say hello back, but they didn't,' Matthews said.

But neighbor Kyong Eagan had fonder memories of Saipov.

She says that the terror suspect treated her like royalty, bringing her food, large cases of water and orange juice and household appliances his family no longer needed.

'He always treated me like I was his mother,' Eagan said. 'He was kind of a nice neighbor. A real nice neighbor to have.'

Eagan said Saipov, who she described as soft-spoken, brought her home-cooked meals because he wanted her to learn about his culture.

'I just can't believe it at all. He was just so genuine. I'm just so shocked,' she said.

Other Tampa neighbors said he should 'fry' for his killing spree.

Gloria Bailey, 71, learnt she was living in the alleged mass killer's former apartment when the FBI knocked on her door Tuesday and a helicopter circled overhead.

'If he did what they say he did, they need to fry him. If he took innocent lives they need to burn him. Locking him up isn't good enough,' she told DailyMail.com.

The grandmother of seven moved into the rented $48,000 condo 11 months ago and found the two-bedroom property clean and tidy when she arrived.

'I've never seen the guy, I don't know what was going on. I just know that he was living in my apartment previously because the management told me,' she added.

'All I do is go to work and go to church. But now I feel nervous, I feel scared. I know America is the land of opportunity but they need to do more screening than they do.

'People are killing each other all over the world and they can all come here.'

Residents living at the Heritage At Tampa housing complex said they barely remembered Saipov who is believed to have lived there in 2015 when his driver's license was registered to the address.

A statement issued by the property's management company confirmed he was a former tenant but directed all questions to law enforcement.

Tatiana Colarte, 19, who used to walk her dog past Saipov's former ground apartment every morning, said: 'It's so scary.

'As soon as I saw a picture I recognized it was him. I can't believe the man who carried out that act lived so close to me.'

Police probed an apartment complex address in Fort Myers, Florida on Tuesday night where terror suspect Saipov lived from 2010 to 2011.

Uniformed officers from the Fort Myers Police Department as well as unidentified plain clothed agents were seen entering a second floor condo and speaking to the current occupants, a couple with young children.

A police car was stationed outside the rented two-bed, $50,000 property on the Gulfstream Isles housing complex but law enforcement had left by Wednesday morning.

Neighbors told DailyMail.com they had no idea who Saipov was before they saw his face on the news and couldn't remember him living there.

This is the rented Home Depot truck that plowed through cyclists and runners on the bicycle path. It only stopped when Saipov allegedly deliberately struck a schoolbus at an intersection

The side of the bus crumpled in, collapsing onto the chairs - and children - inside. Two children and two adults were hospitalized after the crash. One of the children was in critical condition

Shattered bicycles are seen here on the West Side Highway bike path where eight people were killed and at least 12 more injured. At least five of those who were killed had rented Citibikes before they were hit

A vehicle is surrounded by a police perimeter in the parking lot of a Home Depot store in Passaic, New Jersey where authorities believe Saipov rented the truck used in the attack

It's unclear how long Saipov has been living in Paterson, New Jersey. Some outlets say he moved in June, but records indicate he was living there at least off-and-on since 2012.

TERRORIST'S ACTIVITIES SINCE MOVING TO THE U.S. March 2010: Immigrates to the U.S. from Uzbekistan. Stays with the Abdusamatov family in a Cincinnati suburb for his first two weeks. April 2011: Gets a traffic violation in Hartford County, Maryland and lists an address in Fort Myers, Florida May 2011: Starts Sayf Motors Inc., registering the business to the Abdumastov's home address April 12, 2013: Marries Nozima Odilova in Ohio August 2012: Gets a ticket in Pennsylvania and lists a Paterson, New Jersey address Sometime in 2012: Meets friend Kobiljon Matkarov in Florida, is allegedly living there at the time. Matkarov says Saipov lived in Fort Myers until 2014 August 2013: Starts Bright Auto LLC in Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio March 2015: Gets ticket in Pennsylvania and gives officers a Paterson, New Jersey address April 2016: Gets a traffic violation in Missouri and gives cops an address for Tampa, Florida Late 2016 - Early 2017: Saipov's mother visits him for about two months Around April 2017: Starts working for Uber in NJ September 2017: Saipov tells a friend that he's thinking of moving back to Uzbekistan Advertisement

In August 2012, he was pulled over in Palmyra, Pennsylvania and gave cops a Paterson, New Jersey address. He gave cops a Paterson address again in March 2015, when he was pulled over in Mount Holly Springs Borough, Pennsylvania.

The manager of Saipov's local grocery store in Paterson, Farm Boy Super Fresh Supermarket on Getty Avenue, had a poor opinion of the man.

She claims that Saipov was an 'erratic' customer who berated the cashiers, the New York Post reported.

'Every time he came here he was always erratic or arguing with the cashiers,' the manager, who did not want to provide her name, said.

'He would get angry very fast…. he would break the cans, dumb things,' she said, adding that he was known for his rude behavior.

'I feel like he was prejudiced to the cashiers - whether they were covered or not in a hijab - he would belittle them,' she told The Post.

'He was talking good English, proper, but he would call the cashiers dumb, uneducated - how they didn't know how to scan the items.'

She also said that Saipov argued often about the price of Canada Dry Ginger Ale.

'Soda was the problem. He would come here and buy soda,' she said. 'He would give us a hard time on the 12-pack Canada Dry - if it was one price he would want his own price. It was always the soda, always a problem with the 12-pack of cans. Always a problem.'

One neighbor, 64-year-old Slavo Petrov, says he often sees Saipov going to mosque with his wife and kids, but he 'never says good morning and never says good afternoon'.

Investigators work around the wreckage of the Home Depot pickup truck a day after the massacre

Crime scene covered the scene, located in a usually bustling area of Manhattan

A large portion of the West Side Highway remained shut down on Wednesday so that officials could continue to investigate

It has since been revealed that Saipov's mosque was also under surveillance by the NYPD.

According to NorthJersey.com, the NYPD has been studying the Omar Mosque in Paterson, near Saipov's home, as a possible location for 'budding terrorist conspiracies'.

It doesn't appear that criminal activity has been linked to the mosque but the report says it 'is believed to have been the subject of federal investigations'.

ABC News also reports that Saipov was interviewed by federal agents two years ago about his alleged ties to two suspected terrorists.

Law enforcement sources told ABC that Saipov was interviewed as a potential 'point of contact' for two different men who were entered into the Counter-terrorism and Criminal Exploitation Unit's list when they came to the U.S. from 'threat countries'.

One of those men has since vanished and federal authorities are actively searching for him. The other is described as a 'suspected terrorist'.

Saipov was never the center of any investigation, and his interviews with federal authorities did not raise suspicions enough for the FBI to start a case file on him.

Saipov also has a minor criminal record for traffic offenses in Missouri, Pennsylvania and Maryland.

He was pulled over in Maryland in 2011 and gave cops an address in Fort Myers, Florida.

In 2012 and 2015, he was pulled over twice in Pennsylvania and each time gave an address in Paterson, New Jersey

His most recent traffic violation appears to have happened in April 2016, when he got a traffic violation in Missouri and said he was living in Tampa.

Each time he was cited for a traffic violation, Saipov pleaded guilty and paid a fine.

New York City Police Commissioner James O'Neill (center) stands with New York Governor Andrew Cuomo and (left) and Mayor Bill de Blasio during a news conference about the attack on Wednesday

VICTIMS OF THE BIKE PATH TERROR ATTACK Darren Drake, 32 Darren Drake, 32 Drake from New Milford, New Jersey, was taking a 15-minute afternoon break from his job at Moody's Analytics nearby when he was struck. His father said he had recently undergone weight loss surgery and cycled his bike to stay fit. Drake's grieving parents told The New York Post he that he had recently purchased a Citibike membership in a bid to lose weight. They said he was 'so smart' and suggested that he may have been listening to an audio book when he was hit which they said they hoped meant he did not see the truck coming. Nicholas Cleves, 23 Nicholas Cleves, 23 Cleves is a resident of New York. He was identified along with Drake by the NYPD on Wednesday afternoon. Cleves, 23, is a high school graduate and recently completed a degree in computer science from Skidmore College in Saratoga Springs. He lived in Greenwich Street, near to where the truck began its rampage on the West Side Highway at Houston Street. Shopkeepers in the area said Cleves was 'warm' and a 'good person'. It is not clear if he was cycling or walking when he was hit. Belgian tourist Ann-Laure Decadt, 31, Ann-Laure Decadt, 31 Mother-of-two Decadt was in New York with her two sisters and mother and was hit from behind as she traveled south on the bike path. She died in New York Presbyterian Hospital after being rushed from the scene. Her husband said she was a 'wonderful' mother to two young boys aged two and three-months. He was notified that she had died in a phone call from hospital staff on Tuesday evening. The woman's mother and two sisters were not injured. Five Argentinian friends visiting New York Five men from a group of nine Argentinians who were in New York celebrating their 30th school reunion were killed. The men were all on Citibikes and were struck cycling south along the path. They are Hernan Diego Mendoza-Espino, 47, Alegandro Damian Mendoza-Espino, 47, Herman Ferruchi, 47, Diego Enrique, 47 and Ariel Erlis, 48. Five members of this group of Argentinian friends were also killed. They are Hernán Diego Mendoza (far left), Alejandro Damián Pagnucco (second from left), Ariel Erlij (third from left), Diego Enrique Angelini (second from right) and Hernán Ferruchi (third from right). A sixth friend, Martin Ludovico Marro (not pictured), was injured Advertisement

About an hour before the attack on Tuesday, Saipov rented a pick-up truck from a Home Depot in Passaic, New Jersey. He then drove the truck into the city over the George Washington Bridge, at the very northern tip of Manhattan, and made his way all the way down to lower Manhattan.

He crossed onto the Hudson River bike path at Houston Street, and then sped down the path nearly a mile - killing eight and injuring 12 while allegedly shouting 'Allahu Akbar'.

He then waved a paintball gun in one hand and a pellet gun in the other, and was shot in the abdomen by a police officer.

Overnight FBI investigators searched through Saipov's apartment in Paterson, and the white minivan he left behind at the Home Depot parking lot.

Investigators are also collecting video and pictures from the scene of the attack.

In addition to interviewing Saipov, investigators are also talking to his wife and are planning to track down his other contacts. A source told RFE that authorities in Uzbekistan interviewed Saipov's mother, father and 17-year-old sister on Wednesday.

A makeshift memorial stands on a bike path in lower Manhattan on Wednesday where the terror attack was carrier out a day before

Five of the dead were part of a group from Argentina who were celebrating the 30-year anniversary of their high school graduation. Another victim was from Belgium and the other two were American. Two of the injured were staff members on a bus transporting children that Saipov slammed into at the end of his rampage.

Six people died at the scene and two more died at the hospital. Of the 12 others that were hospitalized, three have since been released. Four of the nine still hospitalized were in critical condition but are now stable. The rest are in serious condition. The injuries ranged from a bilateral amputation to serious head and neck injuries, back trauma and trauma to the arms and legs.

Both New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio and New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo spoke at the Wednesday press conference.

'This was an attack on the United States of America, an attack on New York City, an attack on our people,' de Blasio said.

'It was the definition of terror - an effort to take away people's hopes and spirit and make them change.

'And what New York has showed already is that we will not be changed. We will now be cowed, we will not be thrown off by anything,' he added.

During the question and answer portion of the press conference, Cuomo criticized President Trump's 'politicization' of the tragedy.

The aftermath took a political turn Wednesday when Trump said Saipov came to the U.S. under a visa lottery program — 'a Chuck Schumer beauty,' Trump called it in a reference to the Senate's top Democrat.

Cuomo said it was not the time for such remarks - which he called 'not helpful' and 'not factual'.