The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

FBI arrests 5 from compound

Atlanta-area boy, 3, died at ramshackle site in New Mexico.

- By Joshua Sharpe joshua.sharpe@ajc.com and

Federal prosecutor­s say the FBI has arrested five former residents of a ramshackle New Mexico compound where a 3-year-old Clayton County boy died. The five face firearms and conspiracy charges as local charges were dismissed.

The federal complaint charges Jany Leveille, a former Atlanta resident who is from Haiti, of being in possession of firearms and ammunition while in the country illegally. The other four mem- bers are charged with conspiring with Leveille.

Taos County District Attorney Donald Gallegos said Friday his office will now seek grand jury indictment­s involving the death of AbdulGhani Wahhaj, who was bur- ied last week in Atlanta, while his father, Siraj Ibn Wahhaj, was in a New Mexico jail. Authoritie­s say Wahhaj and Leveille traveled from their homes in the Atlanta area late last year to the desert, where they allegedly were training their children to commit terror attacks.

Defense attorneys have said the suspects were misunderst­ood and being cast in a negative light because they’re black and Muslim.

Wahhaj and Leveille had been the only two of the five suspects who remained in jail Friday before the FBI arrested all of them.

Earlier this week, two judges said they had no choice but to dismiss charges and free three defendants after the district attorney’s office missed a 10-day dead- line to show probable cause of a crime at a required court hearing, which was never requested.

“I don’t know whether they are overworked, if they don’t have enough people at their office. I don’t see a district attorney here,” Jeff McElroy, chief judge for the state district court, said in a courtroom Wednesday. “It is disturbing to me that the district attorney would put this court in that kind of a situation where we must comply with the rule, and we must dismiss this.”

Gallegos said seeking indictment­s will allow more time to gather evidence.

Prosecutor­s have alleged that Leveille and Wahhaj failed to give the child medicine he took for ailments including seizures and instead performed rituals to rid him of evil spirits.

All five people will remain in custody pending a Tuesday hearing in federal court.

The other three suspects are Wahhaj’s sisters, Hujrah and Subhannah Wahhaj, and Subhannah Wahhaj’s husband, Lucas Morton. Leveille and Siraj Ibn Wahhaj are Islamic partners. When the man took his son from Atlanta in late November, his legal wife, Hakima Ramzi, protested and contacted authoritie­s, police have said.

He later wrote to her saying he wanted a divorce. Ramzi,who was still in Georgia, pleaded on Facebook for informatio­n on the boy’s whereabout­s.

He wasn’t found until last month, after Subhannah Wahhaj sent a note to a family friend in Atlanta asking for help getting food, but the friend forwarded the informatio­n to authoritie­s. The compound was raided Aug. 3, and 11 children were taken into New Mexico state custody.

Abdul-Gha n i’s body was found Aug. 6, which should’ve been his fourth birthday.

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