FBI agents have found evidence that Chattanooga shooter Mohammod Abdulazeez was following a radical American member of al Qaeda
online in 2013, as well as pages of writing that showed the young man
was suicidal and looking for a way to absolve what he considered were
his sins, according to a representative of Abdulazeez's family.
Video tapes of Anwar al-Awlaki, the high-profile American al Qaeda
cleric and recruiter, have circulated on the internet and have been
popular in jihadist circles long after al-Awlaki's death by American
drone strike in September 2011.
At the time, diary notes kept by Abdulazeez revealed he wrote about
having suicidal thoughts and "becoming a martyr" after losing his job
due to his drug use, both prescription and non-prescription drugs, the
family representative said earlier today. His family has said Abdulazeez
suffered from depression and other mental issues.
But there is no evidence so far that Mohammod Abdulazeez, 24 -- whose
family insists he was deeply troubled and mentally ill -- was inspired
by or directed by ISIS
to carry out a bloody attack on U.S. military targets of the sort the
Syria and Iraq-based terror group has publicly called for over the past
year, the officials said. Al-Awlaki was a high-profile member of al
Qaeda, from which ISIS -- once an al Qaeda affiliate in Iraq -- publicly
split in recent years.
Abdulazeez killed four Marines and mortally wounded a Navy sailor during
his rampage last week. Local authorities said that Abdulazeez was
likely killed on site by police responders.
"I don't think that there is any evidence it was ISIL [ISIS]-inspired.
He may have been seeking some religious guidance to conduct an act. He
could readily find that anywhere online," a senior official briefed on
the investigation told ABC News.
Some of Abdulazeez's friends, who often partied with the young
engineering graduate and went shooting together at local ranges, may
have known he was seeking answers in his religion but they do not appear
to have been aware he was about to take lethal action that he may have
become convinced would earn his place in Heaven, the officials said.
"We may never know what his ultimate motivation was," the senior official added.
The Reuters news agency reported Monday that
some officials said Abdulazeez had been inspired by "general propaganda"
by jihadists and not specifically by ISIS, al Qaeda or other militant
groups. One friend, James Petty, told ABC News that Abdulazeez actually
loathed ISIS for its brutality. “He believed that ISIS was not a group
to go towards” and did not think that “ISIS was even Islamic,” said
Petty.
Many jihadis who oppose killing innocent civilian "disbelievers" still
view the military as a legitimate target because U.S. troops are the
nation's blunt instrument of foreign policy.
FBI Visits Friend's Home
Overnight in Chattanooga the FBI continued its investigation by
questioning friends of the shooter and visiting the apartment of one
friend, whom a source close to the investigation told ABC News is
believed to have gone "joy riding" with Abdulazeez in a rented
convertible two days before the deadly incident.
FBI Chief Ed Reinhold spoke to reporters late Monday, saying the friend
was not considered an accomplice and the FBI just wanted to question
him.
More than two dozen additional FBI agents traveled to Chattanooga to
assist in running down leads and, in part, to help piece together
exactly what Abdulazeez did in the days and hours leading up to his
rampage.
The family representative told ABC News Abdulazeez rented a silver
Mustang Tuesday, showed up at the local mosque and took the friend on a
“joy ride” until 3 a.m. Abdulazeez did not sleep at his parents’ home
for the next two nights.
“He bragged about [the car], and was showing it off to friends about how
fast it would go,” the family representative said Sunday.
Then, on Thursday, Abdulazeez shot and killed the four Marines and
fatally wounded the Navy sailor after opening fire on two unguarded
military facilities in Chattanooga.
The family representative said Abdulazeez had a number of guns in his
house and often used them to go hunting or for target practice with
friends at nearby firing ranges. FBI agents recently focused on the
Walmart in Hixson, where officials tell ABC News Abdulazeez bought
ammunition for his guns on July 11. Two young men, seen with Abdulazeez
in the store, are also being sought for questioning although they are
not believed to be accomplices.
The family representative said Abdulazeez's family sought, without
success, to get him treatment for his mental illness, and to keep him
away from a group of friends with whom he would drink and smoke
marijuana.
Abdulazeez's family released a statement Saturday saying that there are "no words to describe our shock, horror, and grief."
"The person who committed this horrible crime was not the son we knew
and loved," the statement said. "For many years, our son suffered from
depression. It grieves us beyond belief to know that his pain found its
expression in this heinous act of violence."
Still, for the FBI, the psychological profile of the disturbed young man
does not explain why he chose two U.S. military targets, seven miles
apart, for his deadly mission.
No comments:
Post a Comment