Chattanooga Times Free Press

Phone call shows brother pleading with Texas synagogue hostage-taker

- BY DANICA KIRKA, SYLVIA HUI AND JILL LAWLESS

LONDON — A British man who held four people hostage in a Texas synagogue ranted against Jews and American wars in countries like Afghanista­n as his brother pleaded with him to give up and free the captives, a recording of the conversati­on shows.

In the expletive-filled recording posted on the website of The Jewish Chronicle, 44-year-old Malik Faisal Akram said he was “bombed up” and equipped with “every ammunition” as he talked to his brother Saturday from inside Congregati­on Beth Israel in the Dallas suburb of Colleyvill­e.

Gulbar Akram urged his brother to lay down his weapons and return to his children alive.

“You don’t need to do this. Why are you doing this?” he said. “Just pack it in. You’ll do a bit of time, and then you’ll get out.”

“These guys you’ve got there, they’re innocent people, man,” he said.

In response, Akram became increasing­ly agitated and said he hoped U.S. authoritie­s would take notice of the Jewish hostages and agree to his demand to release Aafia Siddiqui, a Pakistani neuroscien­tist convicted of trying to kill U.S. soldiers in Afghanista­n.

Akram said he had prayed about the attack for two years. He said he was ready to become a martyr and that his children shouldn’t cry at his funeral.

“I promised my brother when I watched him on his deathbed that I’d go down as a martyr,” he said at one point. One of his younger brothers, who contracted COVID19, died a few months ago.

“I’ve come to die, G, OK?” the hostage-taker told his brother. “I’ve prayed to Allah for two years for this … I’m coming back in a body bag.”

Saturday’s 10-hour standoff at the synagogue ended after the last hostage ran out of the synagogue and an FBI SWAT team rushed in. Akram was killed, though authoritie­s have declined to say who shot him.

In a webinar Thursday hosted by the Anti-Defamation League, FBI Director Christophe­r Wray said the agency understand­s that such acts are terrifying to the entire Jewish community.

“This was not some random occurrence. It was intentiona­l. It was symbolic, and we’re not going to tolerate antisemiti­sm in this country,” Wray said.

The FBI continues to search phones and other devices as it investigat­es why Akram targeted this particular synagogue, Wray said.

The Chronicle said the recording was part of a longer 11 1/2-minute recording that it obtained from a “security source.” The Associated Press was not able to independen­tly confirm the authentici­ty of the recording, but experts believe it to be genuine.

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