Global Times

N.Mexico police seek public’s help

Muslim shooting probe looks to locate ‘vehicle of interest’

- Reuters

Police in the US state of New Mexico on Sunday asked for the public’s help in locating a “vehicle of interest” in their probe of four fatal shootings of Muslim men whose slayings in Albuquerqu­e over the past nine months are believed by investigat­ors to be related.

Mayor Tim Keller said state authoritie­s were working to provide an “extra police presence at mosques during times of prayer” as the investigat­ion proceeds in New Mexico’s largest city, home to as many as 5,000 Muslims out of some 565,000 total residents.

The latest victim, police said, was gunned down on Friday night, in a killing that local Islamic leaders said occurred shortly after he had attended funeral services for two others slain during the past couple of weeks.

All three of those men, as well as the very first victim who was shot dead in November 2021, were Muslim men of Pakistani or Afghan descent who resided in Albuquerqu­e.

Police have given few details of the latest murder but described the first three killings as ambush shootings.

Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham has characteri­zed them as “targeted killings of Muslim residents.”

US President Joe Biden posted a message on Twitter on Sunday expressing solidarity with the Muslim community, adding, “These hateful attack have no place in America.”

Albuquerqu­e police officials told a news conference hours later that they were following a number of leads and issued a bulletin with photos of a fourdoor, dark gray Volkswagen sedan with tinted windows that they described as a “vehicle of interest” in the investigat­ion.

It was left unclear how the car was tied to the case, and police said they had yet to determine whether they were seeking one or more suspects in the investigat­ion.

The three latest victims belonged to the same mosque, according to Tahir Gauba, a spokespers­on for the Islamic Center of New Mexico. Officials were withholdin­g the identity of the man killed on Friday pending notificati­on of next of kin.

But Gauba said the man was killed shortly after attending the funeral for the two previous victims.

Muhammed Afzaal Hussain, 27, a planning director for the city of Espanola who immigrated from Pakistan, was shot dead on August 1 outside his apartment complex, less than a week after Aftab Hussein, 41, from Albuquerqu­e’s large Afghan community, was found slain on July 26 near the city’s internatio­nal district, police said.

Hussain also worked on the campaign team for US Representa­tive Melanie Stansbury of New Mexico.

Police said they were treating those two slayings, along with Friday’s killing, as linked to the November 7 murder of 62-year-old Mohammad Ahmadi, also a Muslim from Afghanista­n, who was shot to death in a parking lot outside a halal supermarke­t and cafe.

“There are several things in common with all four of the homicides,” city police spokespers­on Gilbert Gallegos told reporters on Sunday.

Asked whether investigat­ors consider the killings to be hate crimes, Gallegos said, “Hate is determined by motive, and we don’t know that motive at this point.”

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