The Mercury News

Officials search for imam after attacks

Investigat­ors search home of man linked to Islamic radicals after Barcelona incidents

- By Lori Hinnant, Joseph Wilson and Alex Oller

RIPOLL, SPAIN >> A missing imam and a house that exploded days ago became the focus Saturday of the investigat­ion into an extremist cell responsibl­e for two deadly attacks in Barcelona and a nearby resort, as authoritie­s narrowed in on who radicalize­d a group of young men in northeaste­rn Spain.

Investigat­ors searched the home of Abdelbaki Es Satty, an imam who in June abruptly quit working at a mosque in the town of Ripoll, the home of the Islamic radicals behind the attacks that killed 14 people and wounded over 120 in the last few days. Police were trying to determine whether Es Satty was killed in a botched bomb-making operation on Wednesday, the eve of the Barcelona bloodshed.

His former mosque has denounced the deadly attacks and weeping relatives marched into a Ripoll square on Saturday, tearfully denying any knowledge of the radical plans of their sons and brothers. At least one of the suspects is still on the run, and his younger brother has disappeare­d, as has the younger brother of one of the five attackers slain Friday by police.

Catalan police said a manhunt was centered on Younes Abouyaaquo­ub, a 22-year-old Moroccan suspected of driving the van that plowed into a packed Barcelona promenade Thursday, killing 13 people and injuring 120. Another attack early Friday killed one person and wounded five in the resort of Cambrils.

The Islamic State group has claimed responsibi­lity for both.

Jared Tucker, 42, of Lafayette, was killed in the attack in Barcelona in which a driver plowed through a group of pedestrian­s.

“Jared Tucker was a loving father of three beautiful daughters and a husband to Heidi,” said a statement from the Tucker family issued to this news organizati­on by Tucker’s sister, Tina Tucker Luke. “He was taken from this world during the recent terrorist attack in Barcelona.”

Tucker and his wife, Heidi Nunes-Tucker, were on vacation in Barcelona, Nunes-Tucker said in a phone interview Friday.

Nunes-Tucker said that while authoritie­s have been slow to publicly identify victims, she was able to see her husband’s body and confirm his death.

The family has created an online fundraiser through GoFundMe and said that the donations will go directly to his wife and three children, paying for their education and living expenses, as well as assisting with funeral preparatio­ns.

Nunes-Tucker described her husband, who is survived by his three daughters and step-son, as always “the light in the room.”

He was a talented chef, she said, and always had a good attitude, even when he came home filthy from tearing up concrete in his work remodeling swimming pools.

“Jared had a magnetic personalit­y. You couldn’t help but be his friend,” she said. “He was such a lover of life.”

Everyone so far known in the cell grew up in Ripoll, a town in the Catalan foothills near the French border 62 miles north of Barcelona. Spanish police searched nine homes in Ripoll, including Es Satty’s, and two buses, and set up a roadblock that checked each car entering the town. Across the Pyrenees, French police carried out extra border checks on people coming in from Spain.

Neighbors, family and even the mayor of Ripoll said they were shocked by news of the alleged involvemen­t of the young men, whom all described as integrated Spanish and Catalan speakers with friends of all background­s.

Halima Hychami, the weeping mother of Mohamed Hychami, one of the attackers named by police, said he told her he was leaving on vacation and would return Aug. 25. His younger brother, Omar, slept late Thursday and left mid-afternoon.

Mohamed Hychami is believed among the five attackers shot to death by police in Cambrils. She hasn’t heard from Omar since he left.

“We found out by watching TV, same as all of you. They never talked about the imam. They were normal boys. They took care of me, booked my flight when I went on vacation. They all had jobs. They didn’t steal. Never had a problem with me or anybody else. I can’t understand it,” she said.

Even with Abouyaaquo­ub at large, Spanish Interior Minister Juan Ignacio Zoido declared the cell “broken” Saturday. In addition to the five killed by police, four were in custody and one or two were killed in a house explosion Wednesday. He said there was no new imminent threat of attack.

Police also conducted a series of controlled explosions Saturday in the town of Alcanar, south of Barcelona, where the attacks were planned in a house that was destroyed Wednesday by an explosion. Authoritie­s had initially thought it was a gas accident, but took another look after the attacks.

Initially, only one person was believed killed in the Wednesday blast. But officials said DNA tests were underway to determine if human remains found there Friday were from a second victim. A police official, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss the ongoing searches, said investigat­ors believed the remains may belong to Es Satty.

The official said investigat­ors also discovered ingredient­s of the explosive TATP, used by the Islamic State group in attacks in Paris and Brussels, as well as multiple butane tanks that the group may have wanted to combine with the homemade explosive and load into their vehicles.

Neighbors on Saturday said they had seen three vehicles coming and going from the home, including an Audi used in the Cambrils attack and the van used in the Barcelona attack.

The president of the mosque where Es Satty preached, Ali Yassine, said he hadn’t seen him since June, when he announced he was returning to Morocco for three months.

“He left the same way he came,” said a bitter Wafa Marsi, a friend to many of the attackers, who appeared Saturday alongside their families to denounce terrorism.

Members of Ripoll’s Muslim community denounced the vehicle attacks and offered their sympathy to the families of the victims.

Authoritie­s said the two attacks were the work of a large terrorist cell that had been plotting for a long time from the house in Alcanar, 125 miles down the coast from Barcelona.

The lone named suspect still at large, Abouyaaquo­ub, figures on a police list of four main suspects sought in the attacks. Also on the list is 17-yearold Moussa Oukabir, whose brother Driss reported to police that his documents were stolen. Ripoll’s mayor confirmed that those documents were found in a vehicle used in the attacks. Moussa was one of the five radicals killed, and Driss is in custody, police said.

Catalan regional police said they are mounting major road blocks throughout the northeaste­rn region, warning people they may encounter traffic jams on different roads.

A French police official said authoritie­s were also looking for a Kangoo utility vehicle that was believed to have been rented in Spain by a suspect in the Barcelona attack that might have crossed the border.

Fatima Abouyaaquo­ub, sister-in-law of the Hychami brothers and the cousin of Younes Abouyaaquo­ub, said she found it all hard to believe.

“I’m still waiting for all of it to be a lie. I don’t know if they were brainwashe­d or they gave them some type of medication or what. I can’t explain it,” she said.

Abouyaaquo­ub’s mother said his younger brother, Hussein, left home Thursday afternoon and hasn’t returned.

Staff writer Matthias Gafni contribute­d to this report.

 ?? MANU FERNANDEZ — ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A man grieves for victims of a van attack that killed at least 14in Barcelona, Spain. The manhunt intensifie­d Saturday for the perpetrato­rs of Europe’s latest rampage.
MANU FERNANDEZ — ASSOCIATED PRESS A man grieves for victims of a van attack that killed at least 14in Barcelona, Spain. The manhunt intensifie­d Saturday for the perpetrato­rs of Europe’s latest rampage.

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