The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Feds: Number N.J. killer had was for gun seller
Prosecutors: Seller a felon barred from having any guns.
NEWARK, N.J. — A bail hearing for a man whose number was found in the pocket of one of the perpetrators of last week’s fatal attack on a Jewish market was halted and abruptly postponed Wednesday after prosecutors said they had evidence he was selling firearms from his pawnshop.
No date was immediately set for a new hearing.
Investigators had previously disclosed that they found several weapons in a search last week of Ahmed A-Hady’s home and a pawnshop owned by his family.
On Monday, U.S. Magistrate Joseph Dickson gave the parties two additional days to present arguments for whether A-Hady should be detained pending a trial or released on bail.
On Wednesday, prosecutors told the federal judge they have evidence that A-Hady was buying and selling firearms. A-Hady, 35, had been prohibited from possessing any firearms because of a previous felony conviction, prosecutors have said.
A-Hady’s brother, Adhem, said outside the courtroom Wednesday that his brother asked his attorney to ask for the hearing to be adjourned because “he was unhappy with some of the things they were saying that were false,” referring to the statements about alleged gun sales. The attorney, public defender K. Anthony Thomas, didn’t confirm that account.
A-Hady, who claimed in court Monday that his name actually is spelled Hady, hasn’t been charged with providing any of the weapons used in the Dec. 10 Jersey City shootings by two attackers authorities say were motivated by anti-Jewish and anti-law enforcement hatred. Four people were killed, including a Jersey City police detective who was shot before the attackers drove to the market.
A-Hady’s number was found in the pants pocket of David Anderson, one of two people killed by police after the hourslong standoff at the JC Kosher Supermarket. Anderson and Francine Graham killed Jersey City police Detective Joseph Seals before driving about a mile to the store, where they killed three people inside, according to authorities.
Anderson and Graham are also prime suspects in the slaying of a livery driver found dead in a car trunk in nearby Bayonne the previous weekend, authorities have said.
Law enforcement officials have said Anderson and Graham appear to have acted alone when they targeted the market, even though they had expressed interest in a fringe religious group that often disparages whites and Jews.