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Police say gun was returned to Fort Lauderdale jihadi last year
By Pamela Geller - on January 7, 2017
Fort Hood Jihad
28
Esteban Santiago, also known as Aashiq Hammad, had been on the FBI's radar screen for some time. Why wasn't he on a watch list? Why wasn't he put on a no-fly list? Was Obama's highly compromised law enforcement agencies afraid of appearing "islamophobic"?
In November 2016, Aashiq walked into an FBI office in Anchorage, Alaska claiming <broken link removed>
Police say gun was returned to Florida airport shooting suspect last year
January 7, 2017
(Reuters) – Police in Alaska said on Saturday they had returned a handgun to the Florida airport shooting suspect which was temporarily taken from him when he underwent a mental evaluation late last year.
Anchorage Police Chief Christopher Tolley said it was not immediately clear if it was the same gun used in Friday's deadly rampage in Fort Lauderdale. Officials told a news conference the gun was returned to the suspect, Esteban Santiago, 26, because the Iraq war veteran had not committed a crime.
Santiago was sent for a mental evaluation after telling Federal Bureau of Investigation agents he heard voices and thought he was being controlled by a U.S. intelligence agency.
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By Pamela Geller - on January 7, 2017
Fort Hood Jihad
28
Esteban Santiago, also known as Aashiq Hammad, had been on the FBI's radar screen for some time. Why wasn't he on a watch list? Why wasn't he put on a no-fly list? Was Obama's highly compromised law enforcement agencies afraid of appearing "islamophobic"?
In November 2016, Aashiq walked into an FBI office in Anchorage, Alaska claiming <broken link removed>
- Jihad in Fort Lauderdale: <broken link removed>
- Fort Lauderdale Jihadi Esteban Santiago aka <broken link removed> "There is no God but Allah"
Police say gun was returned to Florida airport shooting suspect last year
January 7, 2017
(Reuters) – Police in Alaska said on Saturday they had returned a handgun to the Florida airport shooting suspect which was temporarily taken from him when he underwent a mental evaluation late last year.
Anchorage Police Chief Christopher Tolley said it was not immediately clear if it was the same gun used in Friday's deadly rampage in Fort Lauderdale. Officials told a news conference the gun was returned to the suspect, Esteban Santiago, 26, because the Iraq war veteran had not committed a crime.
Santiago was sent for a mental evaluation after telling Federal Bureau of Investigation agents he heard voices and thought he was being controlled by a U.S. intelligence agency.
u
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