Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Friends at a loss to why man went on mall attack

- By Steve Karnowski and Amy Forliti Associated Press

ST. CLOUD, Minn.— He was a recent college student with an interest in computers who had worked part time as a private security guard. He was said to be an honor student in high school. And he had nothing more than a minor traffic citation on his record.

But on Saturday, for reasons still unclear, authoritie­s sayDahirAh­medAdan put on a security guard uniform and went into a central Minnesota mall armed with what appeared to be a kitchen knife. In an attack that took just minutes, he injured 10 people before he was shot and killed by an off-duty police officer.

Those who know Adan, 20, say he was a cool guy with a good head on his shoulders. They are trying to come to termswith what happened and figure out what pushed him to violence.

“We have a thirst for answers,” said Abdul Kulane, acommunity­advocate in the St. Cloud area. “What was his motivation? What happened?”

FBI Special Agent in Charge Richard Thornton said the attack is being investigat­ed as a “potential act of terrorism.”

An Islamic State-run news agency said the attacker was a “soldier” for the group, but it wasn’t known whether the group had planned the attack or knew about it beforehand.

One victim, Ryan Schliep, told WCCO-TV that Adan “just walked right at me” before stabbing Schliep in the head. “He looked just blank in the eyes like he wasn’t even there,” Schliep said.

St. Cloud police Chief Blair Anderson has said the attacker reportedly made at least one reference to Allah and asked a victim if he or she was Muslim before attacking.

Jama Alimad, a Somali community advocate and friend of the family, told the Star Tribune that Adanwas more into sports than religion, describing him as “the most assimilate­d kid in the neighborho­od.”

“HewasanAst­udent. He was a tutor. He was employed,” Alimad said.

A spokesman for the family, AbdiWahid Osman, read from a statement expressing condolence­s for the injured and anyone else whowas impacted.

“As we mourn the death of ourson, DahirAdan, who was very dear to us, we are in deep shock as everyone else is in the state of Minnesota,” the statement said.

Adan had recently been employed part time by the security firm Securitas, and he was assigned for a few months to an Electrolux factory near the mall, Electrolux spokeswoma­nEloise Hale said. Astatement from Securitas said he resigned fromthe company in June.

A spokesman for St. Cloud StateUnive­rsity confirmed Adan was a student majoring in informatio­n systems, but hadn’t been enrolled since the spring semester.

Anderson said the attacker began stabbing people after entering the mall. The victims included eight men, one woman and a 15-year-old girl.

Anderson also said the attack appeared to be the work of one person and there was no sign the attacker was radicalize­d or communicat­ed with any terrorist group.

Authoritie­s were digging into Adan’s background and possible motives, looking at social media accounts and electronic devices and talking to his associates, Thornton said.

HajiYusuf, whois part of UniteCloud, a local group founded to tackle racial and ethnic tension in the city, said he spoke with Adan’s parents and was told Adan went to the mall to pick up an iPhone.

Yusuf said Adan seemed happy when he left home, and that was the last time his parents sawhim.

Aperson at theT-Mobile store where Yusuf said Adan had gone declined to comment or take a message for his supervisor.

If the stabbings are deemed a terrorist act, it would be the first carried out by a Somali onU.S. soil.

President Barack Obama said the stabbings had no apparent connection to weekend bombings in New York andNewJers­ey.

Minnesota has the nation’s largest Somali population, an estimated 57,000 people. Both Anderson and Gov. Mark Dayton warned against a possible backlash due to the stabbings, especially in St. Cloud, where Somalis in the 65,000-resident city about 65 miles northwest of Minneapoli­s have spoken about mistreatme­nt in the past.

“It’s going to be tough times. We knowit’s going to be a long winter for this community,” Yusuf said.

 ??  ?? Adan
Adan

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States