Daily Press

Man who bought guns used in ’15 Calif. terror attack gets 20 years

- By Stefanie Dazio

RIVERSIDE, Calif. — The man who bought two rifles that terrorists used to kill 14 people in a 2015 attack in San Bernardino, California, was sentenced Friday to 20 years in prison.

Enrique Marquez Jr. supplied the weapons that Syed Rizwan Farook and Farook’s wife, Tashfeen Malik, used on Dec. 2, 2015, to open fire on a meeting and holiday gathering of San Bernardino County employees who worked with Farook. Minutes later, a post on a Facebook page associated with Malik pledged allegiance to the leader of the Islamic State terror group. The couple fled and died later that day in a gun battle with authoritie­s.

Marquez, 28, showed no emotion during the federal court hearing as relatives of the victims asked the judge to give him a lengthy sentence. Gregory Clayborn, whose daughter Sierra was killed, said Marquez should be held responsibl­e for the massacre though he wasn’t the gunman.

“He’s a terrorist, your honor,” Clayborn told the judge. “And if you let him out, he’s going to do it again.”

Prosecutor­s sought a 25year sentence for Marquez, arguing he should be held responsibl­e for giving semiautoma­tic weapons and explosives to Farook though he knew Farook was inspired by violent extremists and had plotted with him years earlier to kill large numbers of people in attacks.

Federal prosecutor Melanie

Sartoris said Marquez has a high IQ and the mental capacity to understand the likelihood of an attack occurring once he had bought the weapons.

“He knew all along that this would happen,” but did nothing, she said.

The defense had asked for a five-year term, according to court filings. Defense attorney John Aquilina said his client had been manipulate­d by Farook since he was 13, when they met as neighbors.

Marquez was desperate to socialize with others and needed to escape abuse at home. He had stopped speaking to Farook years before the attack and didn’t know it was going to happen, Aquilina said. He had bought the guns years earlier.

“Mr. Marquez’s sentence should not be reflective of what happened in San Bernardino,” he said.

In determinin­g the sentence, U.S. District Judge Jesus Bernal said he took into account that Marquez had called 911 and cooperated with authoritie­s.

Several years before the massacre, Marquez and Farook had plotted terrorist attacks on Riverside City College and State Route 91, federal authoritie­s said.

Marquez abandoned the idea and distanced himself from Farook in 2012 after three other California men were arrested on suspicion of planning to go to Afghanista­n to kill U.S. troops. Eventually, the three and a fourth man were sentenced to federal prison for conspiracy.

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