The Day

POLICE INVESTIGAT­ING WHITE POWDER SENT TO GROTON ISLAMIC CENTER

Powdery substance, note delivered to Groton

- By BENJAMIN KAIL Day Staff Writer

Groton — Said Ali, who lives at the Islamic Center of New London on Fort Street, has a message for whoever sent the envelope he opened Friday morning, in which he discovered a note in crayon cursing the Prophet Muhammad, along with a powdery substance that quickly sparked a hate crime investigat­ion.

“We breathe the same air,” said Ali, 43, a native of Egypt who has lived in the U.S. for about 20 years. “If I see anything wrong happening to you, I will not hesitate to run and help, not hesitate to do my best to save you or your family or someone you know.”

Ali, a member of the mosque, was exposed to the powder when opening mail in the Islamic Center’s upstairs study just before 9 a.m. Friday.

Ali said he immediatel­y called city police and they responded within a few minutes, followed by City of Groton firefighte­rs and the FBI.

Groton — Said Ali, who lives at the Islamic Center of New London on Fort Street, has a message for whoever sent the envelope he opened Friday morning, in which he discovered a note in crayon cursing the Prophet Muhammad, along with a powdery substance that quickly sparked a hate crime investigat­ion.

“We breathe the same air,” said Ali, 43, a native of Egypt who has lived in the U.S. for about 20 years. “If I see anything wrong happening to you, I will not hesitate to run and help, not hesitate to do my best to save you or your family or someone you know.”

Ali, a member of the mosque, was exposed to the powder when opening mail in the Islamic Center’s upstairs study just before 9 a.m. Friday. Ali said he immediatel­y called city police and they responded within a few minutes, followed by City of Groton firefighte­rs and the FBI. No one else was exposed and no one was injured, police said.

Groton detectives say authoritie­s are treating the incident as a hate crime against the Islamic Center’s worshipper­s.

Ali said the mosque has never received such a letter but he acknowledg­ed hate crimes and hate speech have been on the rise. He said he sometimes hears people saying to members of the Muslim community, “’screw you’ ... but I’m not going to call the cops over that.”

“But this is when it becomes really serious, and that’s when we have to take an action,” said Ali, who noted he is married with two children. “If anything happened to them, I would never forgive myself.”

Firefighte­rs establishe­d an inner and outer perimeter to confine and isolate the area of exposure. Police temporaril­y closed Fort Street and asked neighbors to shelter in place; no one was evacuated. The mosque and Fort Street were reopened after approximat­ely three hours, police said.

Technician­s reviewed the powder at the scene and sent the substance to a state lab for analysis. Police say there was no immediate danger to surroundin­g residents.

The FBI joined the investigat­ion Friday morning, and the Emergency Services Unit of the Connecticu­t State Police, a hazardous materials team from the state Department of Energy and Environmen­tal Protection and Ledge Light Health District personnel assisted at the scene.

“I want to truly thank them for what they did,” Ali said. Authoritie­s told him he would learn more about the investigat­ion in the next several days, he said.

The case remains under investigat­ion.

On Friday afternoon, police in Meriden said authoritie­s responded to 500 S. Broad St., which houses multiple commercial businesses, to investigat­e a report of white powder found at The Money Source.

It was not clear if the two incidents are related. The Meriden police public informatio­n officer did not immediatel­y respond to a message left with that department.

The Record-Journal reported that three employees were quarantine­d and the substance was determined to be inert. The incident remains under investigat­ion.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States