Man who bought California massacre guns faces terror charges
The man who bought the assault rifles used by his friend in the San Bernardino massacre has been charged with terrorism-related offences for plotting an earlier attack that was aborted.
Enrique Marquez, 24, was charged with conspiring to provide material support to terrorists. The charges say he plotted with gunman Syed Farook to launch attacks in 2011 and 2012 at a community college and a congested freeway during the rush hour, but they never carried out their plans.
Marquez also was charged with illegally purchasing two assault rifles that Farook, 28, and his wife Tashfeen Malik, 29, used to kill 14 people at an office lunch of Farookās health department colleagues on December 2.
The couple died hours later using the same firearms in a gun battle with police.
Marquez was working at a Riverside bar at the time of the shooting and is not said to have had a role in the attack, but prosecutors said he was linked to the killings by the guns and bomb-making materials he bought that the couple planned to detonate.
āHis prior purchase of the firearms and ongoing failure to warn authorities about Farookās intent to commit mass murder had fatal consequences,ā US Attorney Eileen Decker said.
A criminal complaint filed in US District Court charges Marquez with three counts that could bring a maximum of 35 years in prison.
A lengthy affidavit outlines evidence against Marquez, including statements he gave investigators over 11 days after he waived his rights to remain silent and be represented by a lawyer.
He called police hours after the attack to say his neighbour had used his gun in the shooting, using an expletive to describe Farook.
Marquez then arrived agitated at a hospital emergency room, saying he had downed nine beers and was āinvolvedā in the shooting. He was involuntarily committed to a psychiatric ward.
Marquez lived next door to Farook, who introduced him to Islam 10 years ago. Marquez told authorities he converted to Islam at the age of about 16 and four years later was spending most of his time at Farookās home, reading, listening to and watching āradical Islamic contentā that included al Qaida instructions on how to make bombs.
Four years ago, Marquez said, he and Farook planned to throw pipe bombs into the cafeteria at the community college they attended and then shoot people as they fled.
He said they also planned to toss pipe bombs on a busy section of freeway that has no exits, bringing traffic to a halt and then picking off the occupants. Marquez would shoot from a nearby hillside, targeting police, as Farook fired at drivers from the road.
As part of the plan, Marquez bought two assault rifles ā in November 2011 and February 2012. He said he agreed to buy them because āFarook looked Middle Easternā.
Authorities previously said Marquez had legally purchased the guns Farook and Malik used. But the charges allege that by buying the guns for someone else, Marquez made false statements on the background check paperwork.
The FBI has said Farook and Malik were radicalised before they met online in 2013, but the court documents detail how much earlier Farook had turned down that path and plotted violence.
Marquez said he and Malik aborted their plans after authorities interrupted a terror plot in the area in November 2012 that involved four men who wanted to join al Qaida to fight US forces overseas.
He said they did not see much of each other after that unravelled, though he deepened his connection with the Farook family, which also led to an immigration fraud charge against him.
Both men were witnesses at the wedding of Farookās brother Raheel to a Russian woman in 2011, according to marriage records.
Last year, Marquez married the sister of Raheel Farookās wife. Prosecutors said it was a sham marriage to help the Russian woman obtain US residency. According to the affidavit accompanying the charges, Marquez was paid 200 dollars a month for the union and said his own mother and brother did not know about it.
About a month before the attack, Marquez made a reference to the marriage and living āmultiple livesā in a chat with a fellow Facebook user that foreshadowed the trouble he was facing before any bullets started flying.
āInvolved in terrorist plots, drugs, anti-social behaviour, marriage, might go to prison for fraud, etcā, according to the affidavit by FBI agent Joel Anderson.
Straight after the shooting, Marquez called his mother to say he was safe but that he would not be coming home, neighbour Lorena Aguirre said.
The next day, federal agents raided his motherās house in Riverside, a city near San Bernardino that is about 60 miles east of Los Angeles.




