Sunday, January 8, 2017

Suspected Fort Lauderdale Airport gunman Esteban Santiago, 26, told FBI that CIA was forcing him to join ISIS

Link: http://www.nydailynews.com/news/world/esteban-santiago-identified-gunman-fort-lauderdale-shooting-article-1.2937904
The 26-year-old New Jersey-born Iraq veteran accused of executing five people and wounding eight others at a Florida airport claimed just two months ago that he was hearing voices.
It was part of a difficult adjustment to civilian life after serving overseas. He sat in an FBI office in Anchorage, Alaska, in November, claiming the CIA was forcing him to join ISIS. He also became a father for the first time last year and was struggling to take care of himself, let alone a child.
On Friday, Esteban Santiago snapped, opening fire near the baggage claim area at the Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport. He reloaded, fired until he was out of bullets and calmly surrendered without saying a word.
Santiago was born in New Jersey but moved to Puerto Rico when he was 2, relatives said.
Fort Lauderdale joins long list of soft targets in America
He grew up in the southern coastal town of Penuelas before joining the National Guard in 2007, and served with that unit in Iraq from April 2010 to February 2011.
From there, Santiago spiraled down a dark descent that included a less than honorable discharge, arrests for domestic violence and now the first mass shooting on U.S. soil in 2017.
AP PROVIDES ACCESS TO THIS PUBLICLY DISTRIBUTED HANDOUT PHOTO PROVIDED BY BROWARD SHERIFF'S OFFICE ; MANDATORY CREDIT.

This booking photo shows suspect Esteban Ruiz Santiago in the hours after the incident.

(Broward Sheriff's Office/AP)

div> In November, the Army vet walked into an Anchorage FBI office and unleashed a torrent of conspiracy theories.
A law enforcement official says he told the FBI that the government was controlling his mind and was forcing him to watch ISIS videos.
Fla. politician claims gun bill could have saved airport victims
Santiago appeared incoherent at times, a source told ABC News.
The FBI agents notified local police after the interview, who took him for a mental health evaluation.
A spokeswoman for the Anchorage Police Department referred all questions about Santiago to the FBI.
FBI agent George Piro, who is in charge of the Miami field office, confirmed that Santiago had come into the Anchorage office and said he clearly indicated at the time that he was not intent on hurting anyone.
Fla. gunman suspect Esteban Santiago said CIA was controlling him
On Thursday, Santiago took a red-eye flight out of Anchorage with only one piece of checked luggage — containing a 9-mm. handgun. He flew to St. Paul/Minneapolis and then took a connecting flight to Fort Lauderdale.
After landing just after noon on Friday, Santiago retrieved the gun from his checked bag and opened fire in the airport.
His uncle and aunt in Union City, N.J., were trying to make sense of what happened Friday.
FBI agents and reporters swarmed their home and they spoke briefly about their nephew.
Five dead, 8 wounded after shooting at Fort Lauderdale Airport
MANDATORY CREDIT

Esteban Santiago is transported to the Broward County Main Jail by authorities early Saturday morning.

(Jim Rassol/South Florida Sun-Sentinel via AP)

div> Maria Ruiz told “Noticias Telemundo” Santiago was hospitalized for two weeks after he visited the FBI.
“They had him in an isolated room because he was a little wrong in the head and he started to like hear things,” Ruiz said. “I am not saying he had mental problems. He just didn’t seem right to me but he looked like a normal kid.”
And then after he goes to Alaska that happened. And now this, so he wasn’t alright.”
A photo from September shows Santiago peacefully gazing down at an infant cradled in his arms.
“It was like he lost his mind,” Ruiz said of his return from Iraq. “He said he saw things.”
Santiago, an Iraq veteran, was identified as the gunman who opened fire Friday in the Fort Lauderdale International Airport.

Santiago, an Iraq veteran, was identified as the gunman who opened fire Friday in the Fort Lauderdale International Airport.

(Obtained by Daily News)

div> Upon his return, Santiago served in the Army Reserves and the Alaska National Guard in Fairbanks.
He was serving as a combat engineer before his discharge for “unsatisfactory performance,” said Lt. Col. Candis Olmstead, a spokeswoman.
His military rank was E3, private 1st class, and he worked one weekend a month with an additional 15 days of training yearly, Olmstead said.
She would not elaborate on his discharge, but the Pentagon said he’d gone AWOL several times and was demoted and discharged.
Still, he’d had some successes during his military career, being awarded a number of medals and commendations, including the Iraq Campaign Medal and the Global War on Terrorism Service Medal.
AP PROVIDES ACCESS TO THIS THIRD PARTY PHOTO SOLELY TO ILLUSTRATE NEWS REPORTING OR COMMENTARY ON FACTS DEPICTED IN IMAGE; MUST BE USED WITHIN 14 DAYS FROM TRANSMISSION; NO ARCHIVING; NO LICENSING; MANDATORY CREDIT

Terrified passengers take cover at Fort Lauderdale's Hollywood International Airport on Friday afternoon.

(Paul E. Kostyu/AP)

div> Santiago was charged in a domestic violence case in January 2016, damaging a door when he forced his way into a bathroom at his girlfriend’s Anchorage home. The woman told officers he strangled her and smacked her on the side of the head, according to court documents.
A month later prosecutors said he violated the conditions of his release when officers found him at the home during a routine check.
He told police he had lived there since he was released from custody the previous month.
Police on Friday blocked off access to the small one-story home, attached to what appeared to be an old motel in a rundown section of Anchorage.
Neighbors said they often saw children in the home and one described Santiago as keeping to himself.
MANDATORY CREDIT

A shooting victim is rushed into Broward Health Trauma Center in Fort Lauderdale after the airport attack.

(Taimy Alvarez/South Florida Sun-Sentinel via AP)

div> “He was super quiet and I barely ever heard from him,” said Eric Brown.
He was also ticketed for minor traffic infractions, including allegedly driving without insurance and having a broken taillight in April 2015.
A landlord also filed eviction proceedings against him in February 2015, stating he had failed to pay his rent.
He was also investigated as part of a child porn investigation in either 2011 or 2012, law enforcement sources told CBS News. Three weapons and a computer were seized, but no charges were filed, sources said.
Santiago had moved to Anchorage two years ago to get a fresh start, his brother said.
Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport shooting suspect Esteban Santiago. Santiago is believed to be the lone shooter in a shootage rampage on January 6, 2017.

Esteban Santiago, the alleged shooter who killed 5 people at Fort Lauderdale Airport in Florida on Friday, January 6, 2017, is pictured in an undated mugshot.
Esteban Santiago is seen in an undated photo and a mugshot from a prior arrest, right.
He found a job with a security company and had been “fighting with a lot of people” while in Alaska and was having relationship issues. Still, he could not imagine his sibling unleashing the carnage that unfolded in Fort Lauderdale.
“He is a regular person, spiritual, a good person,” he told NBC News.
Santiago was doing his best to maintain a sense of normalcy, his brother said.
Bryan Santiago said his brother’s girlfriend had recently called the family to alert them to his psychological treatment.
He said his brother never spoke to him directly about his medical issues.
“We have not talked for the past three weeks,” Bryan Santiago said. “That’s a bit unusual ... I’m in shock. He was a serious person ... He was a normal person.”
With News Wire Services

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

On its own, the report shows how convoluted this US govn't is with these foreigner-based agencies in the US. It then ties in the probably MK mind control programs to the FL shooter.
US Army Nurse Of Florida Airport Shooter Assassinates Revered “End Times” Religious Scholar -- http://www.whatdoesitmean.com/index2203.htm