San Diego mosque shooters met online and left writings expressing hate,
FBI says
[May 20, 2026]
By JULIE WATSON, MICHAEL BIESECKER and JOHN SEEWER
SAN DIEGO (AP) — Two teenagers who shot and killed three people in an
attack on a California mosque were radicalized online where they first
met and shared white supremacist views, according to authorities and
writings they authored.
The pair “didn’t discriminate on who they hated,” Mark Remily, the lead
FBI agent in San Diego, said Tuesday.
The writings, obtained by The Associated Press, include hateful rhetoric
toward Jewish people, Muslims and Islam, as well as the LGBTQ+
community, Black people, women, and both the political left and right.
Both express beliefs that white people are being eliminated, and one
writes about mental health struggles and being rejected by women.
Investigators also found at least 30 guns, ammunition and a crossbow at
two residences after Monday's attack in San Diego and were trying to
uncover whether the shooters had broader plans, Remily said. The
shooters, Cain Clark, 17, and Caleb Vazquez, 18, killed themselves,
according to police.
Family of the two teens could not immediately be reached for comment.
Authorities praised the three men they killed — including Amin Abdullah,
a beloved security guard — for slowing the attackers at the Islamic
Center of San Diego and preventing them from reaching 140 schoolchildren
just steps away.

Imam Taha Hassane said Abdullah engaged the suspects in a gunbattle and
called for a lockdown on his radio. He “sacrificed his life to stop them
from getting inside the classrooms.”
The shooting was the latest in a string of attacks on houses of worship
and comes amid rising threats and hate crimes targeting the Muslim and
Jewish communities since the beginning of war in the Middle East,
forcing increases in security.
Writings show shooters' broad hatred
Authorities have said there was no specific threat against the Islamic
center, which is the largest mosque in San Diego and also houses a
school, police said. In Cain's writings, he calls for Muslims to be
“exterminated.”
The document includes symbols long associated with white supremacists
and Nazis. The two referred to themselves as “Sons of Tarrant,” an
apparent reference to the white supremacist who attacked mosques in
Christchurch, New Zealand, in 2019, killing 51 people.
Muslim American organizations noted that anti-Muslim rhetoric has been
on the rise across the U.S.
The two suspects met online before discovering they both lived in the
San Diego area, the FBI said. “In terms of how the radicalization
occurred, we’re still digging into that,” Remily said.
James Canning, a spokesman for San Diego Unified School District, said
Clark had been attending school online since 2021 and was set to
graduate next month. In 2024, he was a member of the wrestling team at
Madison High School. Canning said Clark had no record of disciplinary
issues in high school.
Neighbors Marne and Ted Celaya said they last saw Clark a few hours
before the shooting and that he waved as he got into a car alone and
drove away. They described the family as good neighbors and recalled
watching Cain grow up.
“It's unbelievable,” Marne Celaya said of the shooting. “He's helped me
bring in my groceries.”
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This aerial image shows the Islamic Center of San Diego, Tuesday,
May 19, 2026, in San Diego. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

The victims were pillars of the mosque
Police said the security guard opened fire when the shooters arrived
at the Islamic Center and tried to barge inside.
As the shooters made their way into the lobby, they wounded the
guard, who kept firing at them, forcing them back outside, where the
attackers fatally shot him, Police Chief Scott Wahl said.
The pair went back inside and searched through rooms that were
emptied during the lockdown, Wahl said. They exited into the parking
lot, where they fatally shot Mansour Kaziha and Nadir Awad,
according to police. The men drew the attackers farther away from
the building, Wahl said.
Kaziha, known as Abu Ezz, “was everything” to the Islamic Center,
Hassane said. “He was the handyman. He was the cook. He was the
caretaker,” Hassane said.
Abdullah had worked at the mosque for more than a decade.
“He wanted to defend the innocent so he decided to become a security
guard,” said family friend Shaykh Uthman Ibn Farooq.
Hassane cried as leaders of different faiths embraced him at a vigil
Tuesday evening to honor the victims. He told the hundreds who had
gathered at a park next to the center that they were there to
celebrate the community’s unity.
“We are here to celebrate the patience, the resilience of the Muslim
community,” he said. “We are here to honor our heroes, our martyrs.”
Mosque leaders were used to hate mail
The Islamic Center sits in a neighborhood with Middle Eastern
restaurants and markets. It includes Al Rashid School, which offers
courses in Arabic language, Islamic studies and the Quran for
students ages 5 and up, its website says.

Josie-Ana Edenshaw, who has been going to the mosque for three
years, said it was especially welcoming to new Muslims.
“They’ve always opened their doors, even to people who aren’t
Muslim, they invite people to Ramadan dinners,” Edenshaw said.
“Every person at that masjid will smile at you,” using the Arabic
word for mosque.
The center's imam said Tuesday that the mosque and its community
wasn't immune to threats over the years.
“We have never ever expected such things to happen at the Islamic
Center of San Diego,” Hassane said. “I mean we are used to receiving
hate mails, hate messages, people driving by and cursing and all
that stuff. But such horrible crime, we have never expected this.”
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