California shooters' home thrown open to media

The home of the California shooters was bizarrely - and controversially - thrown open to the media on Friday

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AFP
AFP
AFP

REDLANDS: Baby toys, shredded files, a Quran, computer paraphernalia: the home of the California shooters was bizarrely - and controversially - thrown open to the media on Friday, offering a glimpse of the life of the couple behind the carnage.

Two days after US citizen Syed Farook and his Pakistani wife Tashfeen Malik burst into an office party in San Bernardino and shot dead 14 people, media crews were given access by the landlord to the two-story townhouse where they lived with their six-month-old daughter.

In a surreal scrum, dozens of journalists flooded into the home in Redlands, jostling for space as they rifled through children's toys and family photos for clues to what drove the couple to commit mass murder.

The FBI - which is investigating the shooting as an "act of terrorism" - said it had turned the property back over to its owner and no longer controlled access, as experts voiced consternation that media were allowed to disturb the site.

AFP's photographer Robyn Beck, among those permitted to enter, said it was mayhem inside.

"People were touching everything, some reporters were removing pictures out of photo albums and photographing them," she said.

Television crews displayed drivers' licences and social security cards on screen, and what some speculated may be the first known photographs of the 27-year-old Malik.

There was a prayer rug, a Quran, and a children's guide to Islamic manners.
In the kitchen, dirty dishes littered the sink area. A waste-paper basket was filled with shredded documents, apparently discarded by investigators.

Journalists filed live broadcasts standing next to the baby's crib, which brimmed with stuffed animals and colourful quilts - drawing scathing commentary from some fellow media.

"Nothing says we're journalists bravely uncovering the truth like pawing around a child's bed," tweeted Mary Beth Williams, a writer for Salon.com.

'Contaminated crime scene'

Some outlets, including CNN, said they decided not to broadcast close-up footage of objects that could be considered sensitive or identifiable, such as identity cards.

MSNBC acknowledged regretting some of its live shots from inside the home.

"We regret that we briefly showed images of photographs and identification cards that should not have been aired without review," the network said.

CNN's law enforcement analyst Paul Callan was appalled by the media crush.

"I've never seen anything like this," he said. "I think it indicates a shocking degree of negligence and really recklessness by law enforcement authorities here.

"You have a contaminated crime scene now."

"This is the biggest visible screwup in history," agreed fellow CNN analyst Jonathan Gilliam. "A terrorist incident just happened and the reporters are going through and looking at IDs and pictures... It is all evidentiary."

Among the items visible at the home were pages listing items seized by the FBI: notebooks, computer equipment, pre-paid phone cards, audio cassettes - and ammunition.

Pressed to explain why media were given unfettered access, the FBI said it no longer had control over the premises.

"We executed a search warrant on that apartment. And last night we turned that over back to the residents," David Bowdich, the assistant FBI director in charge of the Los Angeles office, told reporters.

"Once we turn that location back over to the occupants... or once we board it up, anyone who goes in at that point, that's got nothing to do with us."

'Chaos in there'

MSNBC said a reporter from another news organization had paid the landlord $1,000 for access to the premises, where investigators earlier found thousands of rounds of ammunition, a bomb-making laboratory and 12 pipe bombs.

The owner pried open the door at around 9:15 am and the rest of the media - followed by members of the public - dashed in behind, including one neighbor with her dog.

The elderly landlord, Doyle Miller, who ordered everyone out about 90 minutes later, admitted he was overwhelmed by the scrum.

He told AFP the couple were "good tenants" who paid their rent every month.
"I opened the door and I saw the damage," he said. "It's chaos in there."

"I guess I don't understand that type of person, it's troubling," he said. "They don't have flags or pins on them, how can you tell?"

Both husband and wife were killed Wednesday in a wild firefight with police hours after the carnage at an office party attended by Farook's co-workers in nearby San Bernardino.

Relatives have been unable to explain how the young couple with an infant girl could have staged the country's deadliest mass shooting since the Newtown school massacre in 2012.

California shooting - what we know so far

The FBI said Friday the mass shooting in California was being investigated as "an act of terrorism," amid reports the female assailant had pledged allegiance to the Daesh group online.

Here is a summary of developments in the probe:

Killer couple

Wednesday's attack was carried out by a married couple, parents of a six-month-old baby girl, with no known history of violence or radicalism.

The assailants have been identified as Syed Farook, a 28-year-old US citizen who worked for the local county in environmental matters, and Tashfeen Malik, 29, a Pakistani national.

They were killed in a shootout with police hours after the attack.
The couple had left their infant daughter with Farook's mother before the attack, according to a relative.

14 dead, 21 wounded

Fourteen people were killed and 21 wounded when Farook and Malik opened fire inside the Inland Regional Center, a social services facility in San Bernardino, California.

The attack took place inside a packed conference room rented by the county's public health department for a year-end event, which Farook had been attending.

Authorities identified the victims as six women and eight men ranging in age from 26 to 60. All but two were county employees and co-workers of Farook.

Act of terror?

The FBI said Friday the mass shooting is now being investigated as terrorism.

"We have uncovered evidence that has led us to learn of extensive planning," the assistant FBI director in charge of the Los Angeles office, David Bowdich, told reporters.

"There's a number of pieces of evidence that has essentially pushed us off the cliff to say we are now investigating this as an act of terrorism."

FBI Director James Comey said, however, that there was no indication the couple were "part of an organized larger group or part of a cell."

Authorities have also been looking into a work-related cause, following reports Farook may have snapped at his office party when a religious discussion got out of hand.

One witness said he stormed out of the event, leaving his jacket on his seat, and returned shortly after heavily armed, dressed in black tactical gear and a mask - and accompanied by his wife.

Allegiance to Daesh

Malik is believed to have pledged allegiance to the Daesh in a Facebook post made under another name, around the time of the attack, according to media reports.

The FBI has confirmed it is looking into the supposed pledge.
"I'm aware of the Facebook posting," Bowdich told reporters. "And yes, there was a pledge of allegiance."

Pakistan, Saudi Arabia

Investigators are looking into several foreign trips made by Farook prior to July 2014, according to the FBI.

He notably visited Saudi Arabia. Federal investigators have also suggested he traveled to Pakistan, but that is denied by the family's lawyer.

His wife held a Pakistani passport and traveled to the United States on a K1 fiancee's visa.

The couple is believed to have made a pilgrimage to Makkah in the summer of 2014, during which they married. Malik has spent time living in Saudi Arabia.

Heavily armed

The couple were armed with assault rifles and handguns - all legally purchased. They fired dozens of rounds at the Inland Regional Center, before fleeing in a black SUV.

Explosives rigged to a remote-controlled car were also found at the scene of the carnage, but the device failed to go off.

Police said 1,600 rounds of ammunition were found on the couple and in their car following the police shootout in which they died.

About 5,000 additional rounds, 12 pipe bomb-type explosive devices and bomb-making material were found at the couple's home.

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