US camp raid suspect trained children for school shootings: prosecutors
Siraj Ibn Wahhaj, 40, has been charged with 11 counts of child abuse after 11 children were found living in a squalid compound in the New Mexico desert (Handout)
Los Angeles (AFP) – A man arrested in a raid on a squalid compound in New Mexico was training children living there to carry out school shootings, prosecutors said Wednesday.
Siraj Ibn Wahhaj, 40, was arrested along with four other people on Friday at the desert compound in Amalia, New Mexico, and has been charged with 11 counts of child abuse.
Eleven children aged one to 15 were found living on the compound in filthy conditions, prosecutors said, with no clean water or electricity. Authorities also found little in the way of food.
Wahhaj is also under investigation for the death of a 12th child — possibly his son, Abdul-Ghani Wahhaj — whose body was discovered on the property.
Prosecutors quoted the foster parent of one of the children as claiming that Wahhaj “had trained the child in the use of an assault rifle in preparation for future school shootings.”
As a result, he faces another investigation for teaching “the use, application or making of any firearm, destructive device or technique capable of causing injury or death” with the intention that the knowledge be used unlawfully — which is classed as a felony.
“The Defendant … is under investigation … based upon the training of children with weapons in furtherance of a conspiracy to commit school shootings,” prosecutors said Wednesday in a court filing requesting that Wahhaj be held in custody.
“Trip hazards, woods with nails sticking up, broken glass, bottles, and open trenches littered the property,” it added.
“Trash scattered around the property, no clean water, no electricity, no indoor plumbing and the children were clothed in rags.”
Prosecutors also said loaded firearms were found at the compound.
“(Wahhaj) poses a great danger to the children found on the property as well as a threat to the community as a whole due to the presence of firearms and his intent to use these firearms in a violent and illegal manner,” the filing said.
Three women believed to be the mothers of the 11 children found at the compound were also arrested in Friday’s raid along with another man, Lucas Morten, and charged with child abuse.
Wahhaj is wanted in the state of Georgia for the alleged abduction of his four-year-old son. Authorities are investigating whether the remains found at the New Mexico compound are those of missing Abdul.
In the first operation, when the 11 children were discovered, Abdul was not found.
But officers returned to the site after questioning the suspects last week, which led them to believe that the boy was still there.
“We discovered the remains yesterday on Abdul’s fourth birthday,” Taos County Sheriff Jerry Hogrefe said Tuesday, appearing to fight back tears.
The boy’s mother had told police her child, who she said suffered from seizures along with developmental and cognitive delays, went to the park with his father Wahhaj last December and never returned.
She also told authorities Wahhaj wanted to exorcize his son because he considered that his disability was due to a demon.
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