One of the men arrested after authorities found 11 hungry children living in filthy conditions in New Mexico last week is the son of an imam who has a possible link to the 1993 World Trade Center bombing.
“He met Mahmud Abouhalima when he came to the site to raise money for Muslims in Afghanistan. Abouhalima later helped bomb the World Trade Center in 1993,” the outlet reported.
Police search on the ground in a parking garage underneath the World Trade Center on Feb. 27, 1993, after a car bomb exploded the day before, killing six people and injuring scores more. (TIMOTHY A. CLARY/AFP/Getty Images)
He was a character witness in the trial of Sheik Omar Abdel Rahman, an Egyptian Muslim leader known as the “Blind Shiekh” who was convicted for the bombing and served a life sentence in the United States before dying in 2017.
The eldest Wahhaj also has links to Muslim rights groups such as the Center for American Islamic Relations.
Compound Searched
Court documents filed on Aug. 8 said that the younger Wahhaj was training children to carry out school shootings.Authorities searched the compound, near the border with Colorado, on Aug. 3 to search for missing 3-year-old Abdul-ghani Wahhaj, Wahhaj’s son.
They found the elder Wahhaj armed with multiple firearms and uncovered a suspected firing range on the property.
Taos County Sheriff Jerry Hogrefe previously said that officials found the “occupants were most likely heavily armed and considered extremist of the Muslim belief.”
Search Launched in December
Officials in Georgia launched the search after the toddler went missing in December; officials said they had reason to believe the boy was at the compound, and human remains that were found there have been sent off to be analyzed.The boy’s mother told officials that the boy suffered from seizures and had other severe medical issues that required constant attention from adults.
The trooper who wrote the report in Alabama, after Wahhaj’s car overturned, said that Wahhaj told him the group was traveling from Georgia to New Mexico to go camping. The trooper found no camping equipment but did find three handguns, two rifles, a bag of ammunition, and a bulletproof vest. Wahhaj said that he had a permit from Georgia to carry concealed weapons.
“Mr. Wahhaj seemed to be very concerned about his weapons and stated several times that they were his property and that he owned them legally,” the report said.