Los Angeles Times

New details on shooter’s visa

Tashfeen Malik’s condition may have played a role in showing her marriage was legitimate.

- By Brian Bennett

Tashfeen Malik said she was pregnant when she was interviewe­d by a visa officer after she had applied for permanent residency.

WASHINGTON — Tashfeen Malik apparently claimed she was pregnant when she was interviewe­d by a visa officer after she had applied for permanent U.S. residence in the fall of 2014.

A note scrawled in red ink on a page in Malik’s applicatio­n reads: “applicant is pregnant due on 05-21-15,” a congressio­nal official who has reviewed her immigratio­n record said Monday.

The infant was born May 21, 2015, at a Kaiser Permanente hospital in Riverside, according to county records.

Malik and her Chicagobor­n husband, Syed Rizwan Farook, were killed in a shootout with police Dec. 2 after they launched a shooting rampage in San Bernardino that killed 14 people.

The couple had left their 6-month-old daughter with a relative before the attack. They managed to conceal their growing attraction to jihadist violence until the day of the massacre, when Malik used Facebook to pledge allegiance to the head of Islamic State.

It appears that Malik, who was born in Pakistan, became pregnant shortly after she arrived in the U.S. on July 27, 2014, on a K-1 fiancee visa. The couple had previously married in Saudi Arabia, and then obtained a marriage license from Riverside County on Aug. 16, 2014.

Malik signed the six-page I-485 applicatio­n for permanent residence on Sept. 20, 2014.

She submitted her applicatio­n with family photos showing her and Farook together, and a financial statement from Farook that listed his income as a San Bernardino County environmen­tal health specialist at about $48,000 a year, according to the congressio­nal official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the applicatio­n has not been released.

At some point after submitting the form, Malik met with a visa officer who would have attempted to judge whether her marriage with Farook was real or a sham.

The exact date of the officer’s interview with Malik is not marked on the form. She

was granted a green card in July 2015.

Malik’s pregnancy may have been noted as evidence to show her marriage was legitimate. The note was written on the bottom half of page 2 of the form, over a section set aside for listing the names of the applicant’s children.

On the following pages, Malik checked “No” next to questions asking whether she had ever joined an insurgent organizati­on, had ever been a member of the Communist Party, had committed acts of torture or had killed anyone.

In response to questions, Malik also denied she planned to engage in espionage or overthrow the U.S. government.

U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services provided the green card applicatio­n to lawmakers, but it has not been made public. Rep. Robert W. Goodlatte (R-Va.), chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, posted Malik’s K-1 visa applicatio­n online last week with some personal details blacked out.

In a letter sent to congressio­nal committees Wednesday, the Department of Homeland Security said “all required procedures were followed” in vetting her K-1 visa applicatio­n, and later in approving her applicatio­n to become a lawful permanent resident.

A copy of the letter, which is marked “for official use only,” was obtained by The Times.

“Tashfeen Malik was subjected to numerous background checks at all stages of the review process,” the letter states.

“Those background checks did not reveal any derogatory informatio­n about Malik.”

 ?? Associated Press ?? SAN BERNARDINO shooter Tashfeen Malik was granted a green card in July 2015.
Associated Press SAN BERNARDINO shooter Tashfeen Malik was granted a green card in July 2015.

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