The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Warrant: Father of missing child had talked of exorcism

Abdul-Ghani Wahhaj still missing; his father is in jail.

- By Joshua Sharpe joshua.sharpe@ajc.com

In an average dark-brick home off Rainbow Drive outside Decatur, family members on Monday remember Abdul-Ghani Wahhaj on his fourth birthday — wherever he is.

What should have been a day of celebratio­n was instead filled with questions and longing. A woman at the door politely said the family wasn’t ready to talk. The Clayton County child remains missing even after authoritie­s found his father Friday in a filthy compound in the northern New Mexico desert, along with 11 kids and three adults.

Siraj Ibn Wahhaj had been wanted since December, when the child’s mother told Clayton police he took the boy and traveled west. A warrant obtained by The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on said they left after the dad mentioned intentions to perform an “exorcism” on his son because AbdulGhani was “possessed by the Devil.”

The boy had struggled his whole life with neurologic­al problems from hypoxic-ischemic encephalop­athy. He can’t walk and suffers from seizures, the warrant said.

Authoritie­s in Taos County, New Mexico, said none of the adults found in encampment would say where Abdul-Ghani is.

The idea that the missing Georgia boy might be at the compound started with a plea for help apparently sent from someone inside to a Clayton County detective: “We are starving and need food and water.”

Taos County authoritie­s described the group as possible “Muslim extremists,” though further informatio­n hasn’t been released on those suspicions. AbdulGhani’s father does come from a Muslim family.

Wahhaj is a well-known imam who speaks at mosques across the country, including the Doraville and New York City locations of Masjid At-Taqwa. The imam couldn’t be reached for comment immediatel­y Monday.

The small compound in New Mexico is composed of an old partially buried RV, a wall of tires and an earthen berm. It sits south of the Colorado border amid the Sangre de Cristo Mountains.

Taos County Sheriff Jerry Hogrefe, whose investigat­ors think the missing boy has been at the camp in recent weeks, said the property had no clean water, almost no food, no hygienic products. The kids wore dirty rags and no shoes.

The kids found there are in custody of the state of New Mexico, and the adults are in jail.

On Sunday, Hogrefe announced 11 charges of child cruelty against all five adults: Siraj Ibn Wahhaj, Lucan Allen Morton, Jany Leveille, Hujrah Wahhaj and Subhannah Wahhaj.

It wasn’t immediatel­y clear what relationsh­ip there was between the suspects. The sheriff’s office said the women are believe to be mothers of the children found.

Abdul-Ghani’s mother wasn’t there. She’s been in Georgia trying to figure out what happened to her son after he went with his father to a park and never returned.

Since then, she and other family have plastered their Facebook pages with missing persons flyers, asking for anyone with informatio­n to call Clayton police. They also put flyers out in public.

The last known sighting of the child and father together was Dec. 13 in Chilton County, Alabama, when they were involved in a single-vehicle accident.

Police said there were five other children and two additional adults in the vehicle. Wahhaj told an officer they were headed to New Mexico for a camping trip.

Someone in a truck, which was registered to Morton, picked them up after the wreck and they drove west.

 ??  ?? Abdul-Ghani Wahhaj’s father, Siraj Ibn Wahhaj, was found Friday in a filthy compound in the northern New Mexico desert.
Abdul-Ghani Wahhaj’s father, Siraj Ibn Wahhaj, was found Friday in a filthy compound in the northern New Mexico desert.

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