They are also building the profile of a man who warned a pregnant woman at the mall to flee for her own safety moments before Saturday's attack, he said.
Investigators are tracing the car's ownership after it was retrieved outside the mall, the official said on condition of anonymity because he was not allowed to reveal such details while the investigation is ongoing. They are looking at more vehicles that may have been used by the attackers, he said, but gave no more details.
An Associated Press reporter saw a group of Kenyan and foreign investigators inspecting a silver saloon car parked about 20 meters (yards) from the mall's main entrance on Thursday afternoon. The car's trunk was open as the investigators took pictures and notes, but it was impossible to tell what exactly they were seeing.
Kenyan police have given little information since the attack that shocked this East African nation, saying the investigation has only just began into the storming of the mall on Saturday by Islamic militants throwing grenades and using assault rifles.
Some bodies are believed to be buried under the rubble of the mall, which will take investigators at least seven days to comb through, Joseph Ole Lenku, Kenya's interior minister said Wednesday.
The al-Qaida-linked Somali Islamic extremist rebel group al-Shabab has claimed responsibility for the attack, saying Kenya is a legitimate target for sending its troops into Somalia to fight the militants.
FBI agents -- along with investigators from Britain, Canada and Germany -- have been dispatched to investigate the crime scene. There have been no details on what the international team has found so far in the bullet-scarred, scorched mall.
The high-ranking Kenyan official who spoke to The Associated Press Friday said it was possible that some of the attackers escaped during the mass evacuation of civilians from the mall in Nairobi's Westlands neighborhood.
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Kenyan authorities have since increased surveillance at border crossings and at the airport in Nairobi, he said. No bodies have been retrieved from under the rubble since Kenya's military secured the building on Tuesday, he said, adding that police are also investigating if the attackers stored ammunition inside the mall hours or even days before the attack.
The Kenyan Red Cross says 61 people remain missing and many worry their bodies may be buried in the destroyed part of the mall -- though the government has insisted few victims are believed to still be inside.
The government says at least 67 people were killed in the assault by 12 to 15 al-Shabab militants on the Westgate Mall, including 61 civilians and six security forces. Five militants also were killed, but questions remained about the fate of the remaining attackers and fears persisted that some had managed to escape.
[Associated
Press; By TOM ODULA]
Associated Press
reporter Ben Curtis in Nairobi contributed to this report.
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