Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Moms of 11 children found at New Mexico compound arrested

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The Associated Press

TAOS, N.M. — Three women believed to be the mothers of 11 children found hungry and living in a filthy makeshift compound in rural northern New Mexico have been arrested, following the weekend arrests of two men, authoritie­s said Monday.

A message that people were starving, believed to be sent by someone inside the compound, led to the discovery of the children. A boy last seen in Alabama in December traveling with one of the men who was arrested has not been found.

Taos County, N.M., Sheriff Jerry Hogrefe said that the women and the two men face charges of child abuse. He identified the women as Jany Leveille, 38-year-old Hujrah Wahhaj and 35-yearold Subhannah Wahha. They were arrested in the town of Taos and booked into jail. Police did not say how the adults were related to one another. The sheriff’s office could not be reached Monday morning.

The children ranging in age from 1 to 15 were removed from the compound in the small community of Amalia near the Colorado border and turned over to state child-welfare workers.

Police are still are looking for AG — or Abdul-Ghani — Wahhaj, reported missing from Georgia’s Clayton County, Sheriff Hogrefe said Sunday.

The boy’s mother told police he left with his father, Siraj Ibn Wahhaj, for a trip to a park and never returned. Thechild was 3 at the time.

In January, the boy’s mother, Hakima Ramzi, recorded a desperate Facebook video asking for help to find her husband and son, who turns 4 on Tuesday. Ms. Ramzi also told police in Georgia that he suffers from seizures, cannot walk and needs emergency medication. “I don’t know if he’s alive, or he is,well, I don’t know his condition now. So please, please, I need your help to find my husband and my son,” she said throughtea­rs.

Mr. Wahhaj was detained on an outstandin­g warrant in Georgia alleging child abduction. Lucas Morten was jailed on suspicion of harboring a fugitive, Sheriff Hogrefe said. It was not clear over the weekend if they had lawyers.

Clayton County police said in a missing persons bulletin that Mr. Wahhaj and his son were last seen Dec. 13 in Alabama, traveling with five other children and two adults.

The search at the compound came amid a twomonth investigat­ion in collaborat­ion with Clayton County authoritie­s and the FBI, according to Sheriff Hogrefe.

He said FBI agents had surveilled the area a few weeks ago but did not find probable cause to search the property.

That changed when Georgia detectives forwarded a message to Sheriff Hogrefe’s office that initially had been sent to a third party, saying: “We are starving and need food and water.”

The sheriff said there was reason to believe the message came from someone inside the compound.

“I absolutely knew that we couldn’t wait on another agency to step up and we had to go check this out as soon as possible, so I began working on a search warrant,” Sheriff Hogrefe said in a press release. “The occupants were most likely heavily armed and considered extremist of the Muslim belief.”

No one was injured during the raid, which began Friday morning and lasted all day, the sheriff’s office said. What authoritie­s found was what Sheriff Hogrefe called “the saddest living conditions and poverty” he has seen in 30 yearson the job.

Other than a few potatoes and a box of rice, there was little food in the compound, which Sheriff Hogrefe said consisted of a small travel trailer buried in the ground and covered by plastic with no water, plumbing and electricit­y.

Sheriff Hogrefe said the adults and children had no shoes, wore dirty rags for clothing and “looked like Third World country refugees.”

The group appeared to have been living at the compound for a few months. It was unclear how or why they ended up in New Mexico, Sheriff Hogrefe said.

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