Family of 1 San Diego Mosque Shooting Suspect Says They Are ‘Deeply Sorry for the Pain and Devastation’
Investigators say the 75-page manifesto blamed Jews for world problems and called for race war after the attack killed 3 people.
- On Monday, shooters Caleb Vazquez and Cain Clark attacked the Islamic Center of San Diego, killing three people before taking their own lives.
- A 75-page manifesto titled "The New Crusade: Sons of Tarrant" reveals neo-Nazi ideology and pays tribute to 2019 Christchurch attacker Brenton Tarrant, who killed 51 people.
- Experts describe the attack as driven by the "great replacement theory," a conspiracy claiming white populations are systematically replaced, alongside "accelerationism" to collapse society.
- Swastikas and the phrase "Race War Now" marked the shooters' gear while investigators seized more than 30 guns and ammunition from residences connected to the pair.
- Security guard Amin Abdullah saved 140 students by activating lockdown protocols before he was killed; the Islamic Center reopened Wednesday for prayer services honoring the three victims.
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17 Articles
Family of 1 San Diego mosque shooting suspect says they are ‘deeply sorry for the pain and devastation’
Flowers and candles are seen outside the mosque as hundreds of community members gather at Lindbergh Park beside the Islamic Center of San Diego during a vigil following the deadly mosque shooting, in San Diego, California, United States, on May 19, 2026. (Photo by Michael Ho Wai Lee/Anadolu via Getty Images) (SAN DIEGO) –The family of Caleb Vasquez, one of the teenage suspects involved in the deadly Monday shooting at the Islamic Center of San …
Family of San Diego Mosque Shooting Suspect Blames Online Extremism for Radicalization
The family of Caleb Vazquez, one of the suspects accused in this week’s deadly shooting at a mosque in San Diego, said exposure to hateful ... The post Family of San Diego Mosque Shooting Suspect Blames Online Extremism for Radicalization first appeared on [your]NEWS.
San Diego mosque suspects’ writings reveal influence of online extremism, experts say
The two teenage suspects in this week’s deadly attack on a San Diego mosque appear to have written a 75-page document replete with neo-Nazi ideology, incel rage and racist meme culture drawn from the darkest corners of the internet
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