Los Angeles Times

Those nearby noticed a few oddities

For one thing, why did their neighbor rent a truck he didn’t use?

- By Barbara Demick

PATERSON, N.J. — Even in a neighborho­od packed with immigrants, all with their own customs, languages, foods and idiosyncra­sies, there was something about Sayfullo Saipov and his family that seemed not quite right.

With the benefit of hindsight, neighbors now believe that the Uzbek immigrant suspected in Tuesday’s attack had been plotting it long before a rented truck plowed through a bike path in Lower Manhattan, killing eight people.

Three weeks before the attack, a neighbor had noticed that Saipov, 29, frequently rented trucks like the one used in the rampage.

“This is the kind of truck you use for constructi­on, but he wasn’t doing constructi­on,” said Carlos Batista, 23, who noticed that one of the trucks was parked outside a vacant building nearby for nearly a week. “Why would you spend the money to rent this kind of truck and just leave it outside if you’re not using it? … Now I think he was practicing.”

Others were uncomforta­ble with Saipov’s wife, who wore a niqab, a garment that reveals only the eyes. Other

women among the many Muslims in the neighborho­od wear simple head scarves, neighbors say.

“It was unusual around here. You could only see the eyes,” said Dolores Stanton Vargas, 59, who lives across the street from the neighborho­od mosque.

Saipov and his wife, Nozima Odilova, 23, moved about 15 months ago into a scruffy low-rise red-brick building behind the mosque. They had two girls, one now 6 and another 4, and a baby boy who was born about six months ago.

“The wife hardly went out. They were very mysterious,” said Altana Dimitrovsk­a, 63, a Macedonian immigrant who lives in the same building. She said that the wife would watch through the curtains of her window as the girls played in the front courtyard, and would occasional­ly push the baby around the courtyard in a stroller. Saipov was the one who took the older girl to school.

“The girls didn’t have friends. There were no parties,” Dimitrovsk­a said.

Language and cultural impediment­s kept the young family from befriendin­g many people in the neighborho­od. But Saipov did have two friends, men who looked similar to him with long beards, who were frequent visitors along with their wives, neighbors said. The wives dressed similarly to Saipov’s wife — wearing the niqab — which made them stand out in the neighborho­od.

Over the summer, Batista got into a quarrel with the two visiting men who yelled at him for riding a noisy dirt bike in the evening. Saipov, he said, came out of the apartment and patched up the argument.

“Actually, he was kind of the peacemaker,” said Batista. “He seemed pretty nice. After that, he would wave at me when he drove by.”

The Saipov family was last seen at the apartment complex over the weekend, neighbors said — suggesting that Saipov might have moved his wife to another location in anticipati­on of the attack. But he rented the pickup truck nearby at a Home Depot in Passaic, N.J.

Saipov immigrated to the United States in 2010 after winning what is called a diversity visa in a lottery designed to bring in immigrants from underrepre­sented nations. He lived initially with an Uzbek family in Cincinnati that was acquainted with his father. Although he spoke little English, he quickly started working as a truck driver and trying to start his own business. The year after his arrival, he registered his first company, Sayf Motors, at their address in Symmes Township, Ohio, signing the documents of incorporat­ion with the Ohio secretary of state in tidy cursive handwritin­g.

Two years later, he registered yet another trucking company called Bright Motors at another Ohio address, in Cuyahoga Falls, near Cleveland. He then moved to Tampa, Fla., to start yet another company.

“He always used to work. He wouldn’t go to parties or anything. He only used to come home and rest and leave and go back to work,” Dilnoza Abdusamato­va, a family friend, told the Cincinnati Enquirer.

Saipov married his wife in 2013.

Although he seemed purposeful in becoming a driver, there is no indication that he had planned to deploy a truck as a weapon at the time he arrived in the United States. The occupation is common for Uzbek immigrants, who are well represente­d in the trucking, moving and car services. For the last six months, he was driving an Uber and had logged 1,400 rides, the company confirmed.

A fellow Uzbek immigrant said that there was nothing about Saipov to raise alarms.

“He is very good guy. He is very friendly.… He is like little brother … he look at me like big brother,” a friend, Kobiljon Matkarov, told the New York Post. The only thing that stood out as odd was that once, in June, when one of Matkarov’s children asked to take a photo with Saipov, he adamantly refused, he told the Post.

Authoritie­s believe Saipov became more conservati­ve after he arrived in the U.S. His neighbors say that his parents, who came to visit from Uzbekistan this year when the baby was born, did not appear to be as devout as their son and that his mother didn’t wear a niqab.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said that Saipov did not have a criminal record other than motor vehicle violations that are common for drivers in the trucking industry.

“After he came to the United States is when he started to become informed about ISIS and radical Islamic tactics,” Cuomo said Wednesday, using an acronym for Islamic State.

“All the evidence we have is that he was a quote-unquote lone-wolf model,” Cuomo said.

According to a criminal complaint filed Wednesday in federal court in New York, Saipov decided a year ago to carry out an attack in the United States after being inspired by ISIS videos. He decided two months ago to use a truck, following online instructio­ns about how a vehicle could be weaponized, the complaint says.

Saipov is now hospitaliz­ed with a gunshot wound to the abdomen. “During the interview with law enforcemen­t, Saipov requested to display ISIS’s flag in his hospital room and stated that he felt good about what he had done,” the complaint states.

 ?? Craig Ruttle Associated Press ?? SAYFULLO SAIPOV’S photo is displayed at a news conference in New York. He “requested to display ISIS’s f lag in his hospital room,” a criminal complaint said.
Craig Ruttle Associated Press SAYFULLO SAIPOV’S photo is displayed at a news conference in New York. He “requested to display ISIS’s f lag in his hospital room,” a criminal complaint said.

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