The Arizona Republic

Jersey City probe leads to pawn shop

Arrest comes after guns, ammunition are seized

- Eric Larsen and John Bacon MARK LENNIHAN/AP

KEYPORT, N.J. – A pawn shop operator was arrested in Keyport on a weapons charge and a van was seized in a town 30 miles away as authoritie­s expanded their investigat­ion into last week’s Jersey City shooting rampage now viewed as an act of domestic terrorism.

The white van recovered in Orange, New Jersey, 10 miles northwest of Jersey City, was being examined for evidence related to the attack that left six people dead, including the shooters, the FBI said. The van was not the U-Haul the killers drove to the scene, and no informatio­n on how the van figured into the attack was released.

Ahmed A-Hady, 35, was arrested Saturday on one count of being a felon in possession of a firearm. U.S. Attorney Craig Carpenito said in a statement that the FBI seized several weapons and over 400 rounds of ammunition during searches of the Buy N Sell City and AHady’s home.

On Dec. 10 David Anderson, 47, and Francine Graham, 50, shot a Jersey City police detective at a cemetery before driving a mile to the JC Kosher Supermarke­t,

where they killed three bystanders and commenced a three-hour gun battle with police, authoritie­s said.

Anderson and Graham died at the scene, where authoritie­s recovered a AR-15-style rifle, a shotgun and two handguns. A handwritte­n note containing a telephone number ending in 4115 and a Keyport address was recovered from Anderson’s right back pants’ pocket, Carpenito said. FBI agents determined that the phone number belonged to A-Hady.

The weapons found in A-Hady’s pawn shop and home included three AR-15-style assault rifles, three handguns and one shotgun, Carpenito said.

Some locals were stunned by A-Hady’s arrest. Pritesh Patel said he has worked at a shop across the street from the pawn business for more than a year and never heard of any trouble.

The nature of A-Hady’s relationsh­ip to the shooters was not revealed. AHady’s brother, Adhem A-Hady, told the local CBS-TV station he had never heard of them before the shootings.

“We don’t sell weapons,” Adhem AHady said. “We never sold weapons. The only thing that we have in the store is, like, nunchucks.”

Records indicated that A-Hady purchased some of the weapons in 2007. Five years later, he was convicted of attempting to obtain drugs by fraud, a crime punishable by more than one year in state prison. That conviction made A-Hady ineligible to possess a firearm, Carpenito said.

The charge of being a previously convicted felon in possession of a firearm carries a maximum potential penalty of 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

Jersey City Police Detective Joseph Seals, 40; Leah Minda Ferencz, 31; Moshe Hirsch Deutsch, 24; and Douglas Miguel Rodriguez Barzola, 49, were killed in the attack, which state Attorney General Gurbir Grewal said last week was being investigat­ed as domestic terrorism.

 ??  ?? Bracha Shanes pens a note of condolence at the boarded-up kosher grocery store in Jersey City, N.J., where three people and two gunmen were killed Dec. 10.
Bracha Shanes pens a note of condolence at the boarded-up kosher grocery store in Jersey City, N.J., where three people and two gunmen were killed Dec. 10.

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