The Borneo Post (Sabah)

New Mexico judge gets death threats after granting bail to five Muslim compound members

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TAOS, New Mexico: A New Mexico judge received death threats and Islamophob­ic abuse a day after she granted bail to five Muslims charged with child abuse and accused of training children at their compound to carry out attacks, court officials said.

Police raided the compound in Taos County on Aug 3 following a tip-off that children held there were starving.

They found 11 children in need of food and water, and three days later unearthed the body of a toddler.

In an order published on Tuesday, district Judge Sarah Backus said prosecutor­s had produced evidence that was ‘troubling and unusual’ but failed to show the defendants abused the children and were a threat to society if released on bail.

One caller told Backus “her throat would be slit” while another said he wished “someone would smash her head,” New Mexico courts spokesman Barry Massey said.

Backus was bombarded with abuse and criticism on Twitter, and received hundreds of calls and emails, most of which referred to her using terms like ‘Islamic terrorism sympathise­r’, Massey said.

Backus closed her court and the Taos County courthouse went into lockdown after threats of violence against all staff.

Prosecutor­s alleged the dead toddler was a severely ill boy abducted from Georgia by his father, Siraj Ibn Wahhaj, the son of a prominent New York imam.

Prosecutor­s said the boy died at the compound in February as Ibn Wahhaj tried to heal him through prayer.

Prosecutor­s allege Wahhaj gave firearms training to two teenage boys at the compound to attack ‘corrupt institutio­ns’.

New Mexico’s Republican Governor Susana Martinez slammed Backus’ bail decision in a statement, saying the state’s Supreme Court had been “dictating pretrial release for all kinds of dangerous criminals.”

The five defendants – two men, their wives and a sister – must wear GPS ankle bracelets once released on US$20,000 bail each and are not allowed back to the compound, Backus ruled.

Their 11 children are in protective care and the defendants may visit them once released, Backus said.

The case has split the Taos County community between those who believe the group was involved in a failed attempt to live “off the grid,” and others who fear they were hatching a plot to attack schools, banks and police, as prosecutor­s alleged.

“There’s a murderer in the bunch,” said Larry Salazar, 67, a rancher who lives about 2 miles from the high-desert compound. “What are we going to do to protect ourselves? Where are they going to be going to?”. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Defence attorney Aleksandar Kostich (right) speaks to defendant Lucas Morton in district court where Morton and five others accused of child abuse were granted bail inTaos County, New Mexico, US. — Reuters photo
Defence attorney Aleksandar Kostich (right) speaks to defendant Lucas Morton in district court where Morton and five others accused of child abuse were granted bail inTaos County, New Mexico, US. — Reuters photo

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