Behavior of teen in mosque shooting led police to seize family guns a year before attack
Police had obtained a court order to remove 26 guns from one suspect’s family after alarming behavior and Nazi idolization, records show.
- On Monday, 18-year-old Caleb Vazquez and 17-year-old Cain Clark attacked the Islamic Center of San Diego, killing three people before dying by suicide. Police later recovered 30 weapons from three homes connected to the gunmen.
- Police had previously identified Vazquez as a threat, obtaining a January 29, 2025, court order to remove 26 guns from his father Marco Vazquez after officers documented the teen was 'involved in suspicious behavior idolizing Nazis and mass shooters.'
- Investigators believe Vazquez and Clark met online and fed off each other's 'radicalised ideology,' while documents reveal Vazquez had been placed on a 72-hour mental health hold last year due to concerns about his fixation on mass violence.
- The Vazquez family released a statement Wednesday condemning the 'hateful rhetoric, extremist content and propaganda' that 'contributed to his descent into radicalized ideologies and violent beliefs,' while acknowledging mental instability despite therapy efforts.
- Authorities are authenticating a 75-page manifesto found in the gunmen's vehicle, as the FBI continues investigating the pair's extremist ties and the motive behind the rampage.
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81 Articles
Behaviour of teen in mosque shooting led police to seize family guns a year before attack
One of the teenagers who killed three people at a San Diego mosque this week was flagged to law enforcement last year for exhibiting alarming behaviour and idolizing Nazis, prompting police to confiscate his father’s guns, according to court records.
Teen in Mosque Shooting Flagged to Police for Idolizing Nazis a Year Before Attack
Court records reveal new details about one of two teenagers who killed three people at a San Diego mosque Teen in Mosque Shooting Flagged to Police for Idolizing Nazis a Year Before Attack.
Why classmates, school officials and Chula Vista police asked a court — unsuccessfully — to keep one of the suspected mosque shooters away from his dad’s guns
A Chula Vista detective declared last year that one of the suspected mosque shooters was dangerous based on his neo-Nazi obsessions.
Behavior of teen in mosque shooting led police to seize family guns a year before attack - The Boston Globe
The officers who conducted a welfare check at the home of Caleb Vazquez wrote that he was “involved in suspicious behavior idolizing nazis and mass shooters."
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