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Muslims Pleased By Arrests, Caution Against Speculation 

CAIR cautions American Muslims will now face scapegoating and bias

WASHINGTON, October 25 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - A national Islamic civil rights and advocacy group Thursday, October 24, congratulated U.S. law enforcement officials for the arrest of two suspects in the series of sniper attacks in the Washington D.C. area, while, at the same time, cautioning against speculation and stereotyping based on the name of one suspect.

"Along with all Americans, Muslims hope today's arrests will bring an end
to this tragic episode.

"The swift apprehension of the suspects can only be attributed to effective law enforcement by a number of local, state and national agencies.

"Our hearts go out to the families and loved ones of those killed or injured in these senseless attacks," said Nihad Awad, executive director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR).

"We are concerned that because a suspect in this case has the last name of 'Muhammad,' American Muslims will now face scapegoating and bias.

"Police reports indicate the suspects acted alone, based on their own motivations. There is no indication that this case is related to Islam or Muslims.

"We, therefore, ask journalists and media commentators to avoid speculation based
on stereotyping or prejudice.

"The American Muslim community should not be held accountable for the alleged criminal actions of what appear to be troubled and deranged individuals," said Awad.

He urged American Muslims to go about their normal routines, but with added
caution.

Last week, CAIR asked members of the American Muslim community to help the
survivors of the sniper attacks and the families of those killed by donating to a fund set up for that purpose.

Federal and local authorities are expected to meet Friday, October 25, to discuss filing charges against two suspects in the Washington-area sniper case, as the search for more incriminating evidence continues, reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).

A Gulf War veteran and a teenager driving around in a car with holes in the trunk, presumably through which a rifle was fired at unsuspecting victims, were apprehended Thursday, October 24, on charges unrelated to the three-week crime spree that left ten people dead and three wounded.

A Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms agent said tests had shown that bullets from the Bushmaster 223-caliber semi-automatic rifle found in the car were used in eight of the murders and the three woundings.

Tests on the two other murders had proved inconclusive.

Millions of people in the Washington metropolitan area breathed a collective sigh of relief as they resumed their daily lives Friday, leaving behind the spooky feeling of being the unsuspecting target of a lurking sniper.

Douglas Gansler, state's attorney for Montgomery County in Maryland, and U.S. Attorney for Maryland, Thomas DiBaggio, were to meet at Friday to discuss filing of criminal charges against John Allen Muhammad, 41, and John Lee Malvo, 17, a Jamaican national.

The two African Americans were arrested early Thursday as they slept in a car at a highway rest stop near Frederick, Maryland, north of Washington.

Muhammad was later charged with a federal firearms violation not connected to the sniper killings.

Malvo appeared before a juvenile court. But police said both were the official suspects in the shootings that terrorized the Washington region since October 2.

"We now consider them suspects in the string of shootings in Maryland, Virginia and the District of Columbia," Montgomery County police chief Charles Moose, who coordinated the hunt, triumphantly said.

President George W. Bush congratulated Moose by telephone as he was heading to his Texas ranch for a summit Friday with Chinese President Jiang Zemin, Bush spokesman, Ari Fleischer said.

In a written statement, Bush said "the entire nation is grateful to all of the local, state and federal law enforcement officials who have worked with such urgency and with so little rest to solve the sniper case."

Relieved school officials in Montgomery County on Washington's northern border, where all outdoor activities had been shut down, immediately issued a statement saying Friday would see a return to normalcy.

Many of the shootings had occurred in the county.

The suspects were arrested within an hour of a police alert for a 1990 Chevrolet Caprice.

Truck driver Ron Lancz saw the car with the men sleeping inside about 70 kilometers (45 miles) northwest of Washington.

Lancz said he blocked the car's exit with his truck while he waited for police, who took the pair into custody without incident.

A 500,000 dollar reward was posted for information leading to the capture and conviction of the sniper.

The investigation, which had been marked by tensions with the media over leaked accounts and public unease over the lack of progress, gathered pace in the hours prior to the arrest.

Federal agents searching a home in Tacoma, in the west coast state of Washington, took away a tree trunk that may have been used for target practice when Muhammad and Malvo used to live there -- neighbors remember hearing frequent gunfire coming from the property.

Police were alerted to the pair after investigating a possible connection between the Washington sniper and a the shooting death and injury of two female liquor store employees in Montgomery, Alabama, on September 21.

The sniper himself apparently tipped off police in telephone calls by angrily telling them to look into a murder-robbery in Montgomery.

A composite sketch of a suspect in the Alabama crime appeared to match Malvo and media reports said a fingerprint on a cartridge at the scene matched one in his files kept by immigration authorities.

According to a Defense Department official, Muhammad served in the army from 1985 to 1994.

He became a sergeant and fought in the 1991 Gulf War.

He held the highest-level "expert" rating with the M-16 rifle, which is similar to the Bushmaster police say was used by the sniper.

John Allen Muhammad - A Profile

John Allen Muhammad is a 42-year-old Gulf War veteran who converted to Islam 17 years ago, according to a CNN report .

The 6-foot, 1-inch Muhammad was a member of the U.S. military who was stationed in the 1980s at Fort Lewis, Washington, about 15 miles from Tacoma, and at the now-closed Fort Ord, near Monterey, California.

Felix Strozier ran a martial arts school with Muhammad in Tacoma several years ago and described him as a "pretty nice person."

At first, Strozier said their relationship was fine, but he said they had a falling out after Muhammad borrowed $500 from the school and never repaid the debt.

The school closed in 1998.

He described Muhammad as a strong believer in Islam who attended the Million Man March.

A former neighbor of Muhammad's said he provided security at the march, which was organized by Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan.

Nation of Islam officials in Chicago had no immediate comment, CNN reported.

The Seattle Times reported Thursday that Muhammad converted to Islam after his first marriage ended in divorce.

The Times quoted Carol Williams, his first wife and the mother of his oldest son, as saying he converted to Islam 17 years ago, about the same time he joined the Army.

Williams told the Times that Muhammad was outgoing and had a good sense of humor. "He wasn't a quiet type. He liked to talk. He liked to mingle with people," she said.

Muhammad had four children by two marriages that ended in divorce, Times added.

Both involved bitter custody battles, the Times reported, but court records showed no felony record for him in Washington state.

Federal sources told Seattle Times that Muhammad and Malvo were allegedly known to speak sympathetically about the 9/11 hijackers and may have been motivated by anti-American sentiment.

But Strozier ruled it out. Asked if Muhammad had ever expressed anti-American beliefs to him, Strozier said no.

In Baton Rouge, Louisiana, Sheila Tezando, Muhammad's sister-in-law, said she last saw Muhammad and Malvo three months ago at her home in Baton Rouge when they were in town for a visit.

Tezando said that there was nothing in their demeanor that would lead her to believe that they were capable of any violent act.

"This is all a shock," she said.

 

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