Los Angeles Times

Shooter was a ‘known wolf ’

In two FBI investigat­ions, agents concluded he was not a threat

- By Del Quentin Wilber and Brian Bennett

WASHINGTON — Omar Mateen was scaring his coworkers.

In the spring of 2013, the edgy security guard at St. Lucie County Courthouse in Florida was boasting of his family ties to Al Qaeda, the Sunni extremist group, while also bragging that he belonged to Hezbollah, a rival Shiite group.

He hoped to die as a martyr when police raided his apartment, he told his coworkers.

Alarmed, they called the FBI, which launched a 10month investigat­ion to determine whether Mateen, a U.S. citizen born in New York, really was a terrorist — or might become one.

Between May 2013 and March 2014, the FBI sent an undercover informant who secretly recorded Mateen, conducted surveillan­ce of his movements and scrutinize­d his communicat­ions, FBI officials said Monday. They even interviewe­d him twice.

At the end, the agents concluded that Mateen was not a threat and had broken no laws. He was full of bluster, they decided, and angry about being teased and, in his view, discrimina­ted against by his colleagues.

His name was removed from the terrorist watch list maintained by the FBI’s Terrorist Screening Center, a database that serves as a clearingho­use for federal

and state law enforcemen­t agencies to keep track of potential threats.

Several months later, Mateen popped up on the FBI’s radar a second time as agents investigat­ed Moner Mohammad Abusalha, a Florida man who had joined Al Nusra Front, an Al Qaeda affiliate in Syria.

In May 2014, Abusalha blew up a truck packed with explosives, killing more than a dozen people and becoming the first American to carry out a suicide bombing in Syria.

Again, FBI agents interviewe­d Mateen. He told them he had met Abusalha casually at a local mosque several years earlier. Again, the FBI concluded Mateen wasn’t a threat.

Those vivid details and others emerged Monday as FBI officials scrambled to explain how two previous investigat­ions of Mateen failed to prevent him from killing 49 people at a gay nightclub Sunday in Orlando, Fla., in the worst mass shooting in U.S. history.

The bureau’s handling of Mateen’s case got a strong vote of support from President Obama after he was briefed by James B. Comey, the FBI director.

“The FBI followed the procedures that they were supposed to and did a proper job,” Obama told reporters.

As part of its current investigat­ion, the FBI is seeking to determine whether Mateen scouted out other gay venues or other potential targets, including properties associated with Disney World, according to a senior U.S. law enforcemen­t official briefed on the investigat­ion.

Agents believe he visited those locations in recent months, but cannot say for certain that he was evaluating them as potential targets, the official said.

Former agents said investigat­ors would be digging through Mateen’s cellphone and other electronic devices to look for GPS data, and would collect records from businesses and individual­s who may have had contact with him.

Comey, along with Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson and Nick Rasmussen, director of the National Counterter­rorism Center, will give a classified briefing to House members Tuesday in the first of what is likely to be an extended congressio­nal inquiry into the shooting.

While the FBI was reviewing its records of the two investigat­ions to see whether agents missed any clues, senior officials said Monday that they didn’t know what else they could have done.

“We will continue to look forward in this investigat­ion, and backward,” Comey told reporters at FBI headquarte­rs.

“We will leave no stone unturned. And we will work all day and all night to understand the path to that terrible night. We are also going to look hard at our own work to see if there is something we could have done differentl­y,” he said.

“So far, the honest answer is that I don’t think so. I don’t see anything in reviewing our work that our agents could have done differentl­y.”

Still, officials found one red flag that may prove important.

During the 2014 investigat­ion of Abusalha, the suicide bomber, FBI agents asked someone else they interviewe­d who else might become radicalize­d, a law enforcemen­t official said Monday.

The person singled out Mateen because he had mentioned watching videos featuring Anwar Awlaki, the American-born cleric who joined Al Qaeda and was killed in a 2011 drone strike in Yemen, the official said.

Awlaki’s online sermons have inspired a generation of terrorists. They include the Army major who shot and killed 13 people at Ft. Hood, Texas, in 2009, and the couple who shot and killed 14 people in San Bernardino in December.

But the individual added that Mateen had since settled down, gotten married and was holding a steady job. In other words, he told agents that he didn’t think Mateen was still a threat.

Mateen was not the first “known wolf,” the term analysts use for a person who passes an investigat­ion and then becomes a terrorist. The latest tragedy highlights the challenges authoritie­s face in trying to predict when noxious speech shifts to deadly action.

Authoritie­s had investigat­ed the Ft. Hood killer before his rampage, and had interviewe­d one of the brothers who planted bombs at the finish line of the Boston Marathon in 2013.

One of the gunmen who tried to assault an exhibit featuring cartoon images of the prophet Muhammad in Garland, Texas, in May 2015 also had been under FBI surveillan­ce.

FBI officials said they had found no evidence indicating Mateen had contact or support from Islamic State or any other terrorist group before Sunday’s attack. Indeed, he seemed to have a hodgepodge of motivation­s for embarking on the massacre.

Thirty minutes into the shooting, Mateen called 911 and told the operator he was swearing allegiance to the leader of Islamic State, Abu Bakr Baghdadi, officials said.

He then expressed solidarity with Dzhokhar and Tamerlan Tsarnaev, the Boston Marathon bombers, and to Abusalha, the Al Nusra Front suicide bomber.

Neither the Tsarnaev brothers nor Abusalha had any affiliatio­n with Islamic State. To add to the confusion, Al Nusra Front and Islamic State are fighting each other in Syria.

Mateen claimed in 2013 that he had ties to Al Qaeda, a Sunni group, and to Hezbollah, a Shiite group that opposes Al Qaeda.

The FBI investigat­ion found no links to either group and agents concluded Mateen did not understand the difference between Sunni and Shiite Islam, the religion’s two major denominati­ons, a U.S. law enforcemen­t official said.

Mateen’s lack of rigid ideology and his affection for terrorist groups that are at odds with one another suggest he was posturing or seeking an excuse to commit mass murder, experts said.

“The guy seems to be all over the place,” said Ali Soufan, a former FBI agent who worked on terrorism cases and now runs a security consulting firm in New York.

“This profile is about someone who is violent, mentally unstable, a wife beater — this is all part of a picture that the investigat­ors have to look at,” Soufan said.

 ?? Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times ?? FBI INVESTIGAT­ORS outside the Pulse nightclub in Orlando. As an inquiry into the shooting continued Monday, FBI officials scrambled to explain how two previous investigat­ions of the gunman, Omar Mateen, failed to prevent him from killing 49 people.
Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times FBI INVESTIGAT­ORS outside the Pulse nightclub in Orlando. As an inquiry into the shooting continued Monday, FBI officials scrambled to explain how two previous investigat­ions of the gunman, Omar Mateen, failed to prevent him from killing 49 people.
 ?? Brendan Smialowski AFP/Getty Images ?? ORLANDO police and FBI officials near the crime scene. The FBI is investigat­ing whether Mateen scouted out other gay venues or other potential targets.
Brendan Smialowski AFP/Getty Images ORLANDO police and FBI officials near the crime scene. The FBI is investigat­ing whether Mateen scouted out other gay venues or other potential targets.

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