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story.lead_photo.caption A member of the FBI dive team searches a small lake Friday about 3 miles from where 14 people were shot to death last week at the Inland Regional Center in San Bernardino, Calif. (AP / JAE C. HONG )

WASHINGTON — The U.S. government appears not to have picked up on extremist messages exchanged during the online courtship two years ago between the American-born man accused in the San Bernardino, Calif., shootings and his future wife in Pakistan, according to lawmakers detailing closed briefings by federal officials.

Photo by JAE C. HONG / AP
An FBI diver Friday prepares to search a small lake in San Bernardino, Calif., as part of the investigation into shootings there last week. Also Friday, lawmakers briefed on the case said that the government appears to have missed extremist messages exchanged online by the couple who carried out the shootings.

U.S. officials say 28-yearold Syed Farook and his wife, 29-year-old Tashfeen Malik, discussed martyrdom and jihad online as early as 2013. But the couple never surfaced on law enforcement’s radar, and Malik was able to enter the U.S. on a fiancee visa last year despite having professed radical views online.

Meanwhile, the investigation into the shootings continued in San Bernardino, where an FBI dive team searched a small, urban lake about 3 miles north of the shooting site.

A law enforcement official briefed on the investigation said divers are looking for a computer hard drive that may have been dumped in the lake. The official wasn’t authorized to speak by name about an ongoing investigation and spoke on condition of anonymity.

Authorities said the shooters, who killed 14 people at a holiday gathering on Dec. 2, had been in the area.

The couple died in a shootout with law enforcement hours after the attack and left behind a 6-monthold daughter.

FBI Director James Comey and other senior federal officials on Thursday briefed members of Congress, who were curious to know whether any red flags may have been missed in the past two years.

“Everyone’s asking the same questions about how it is that law enforcement didn’t know, or intelligence officials didn’t know — that they could have flown under the radar and nothing gave an indication that they were a threat,” said Rep. Jim Langevin, D-R.I., a member of the House Homeland Security Committee.

Rep. Adam Schiff of California, the top Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, said it was his understanding that Malik was subjected to an in-person interview during the application process for a visa, but that he did not have additional details on it. He noted that there were some indications that might have alerted law enforcement to Farook, but he declined to detail what those might have been.

“I don’t think we know yet enough to say these were apparent without the advantage of hindsight,” Schiff said.

Republican Rep. Will Hurd of Texas, a member of the House Homeland Security Committee, said there’s currently no evidence Malik’s radicalization would have been readily apparent when she was evaluated for a fiancee visa.

“I don’t think there was missed information,” he said. “It appears that there was not any evidence that would have been discoverable during an interview for a visa.”

He declined to discuss what specifically led investigators to conclude that the couple had radicalized independently as early as 2013, but suggested the information did not come from intercepts. Comey has said Farook had been in communication with individuals who were being scrutinized by the FBI in terrorism investigations, but that the contact he had was not enough to bring him onto the law enforcement radar.

“It’s safe to say that the information about what happened prior to their marriage and to the attacks in San Bernardino was acquired through forensic investigations of these individual lives,” Hurd said, adding: “These people weren’t on the radar.”

Multiple lawmakers raised the fact that neighbors saw suspicious activities but failed to mention them to investigators until after the attack.

“There were people who were aware of things, thought they were suspicious, but did not want to be accused of being discriminatory for reporting something,” said Rep. Bob Goodlatte, R-Va., chairman of the House Judiciary Committee. He said these people saw activity around the garage that they thought was suspicious.

Asked repeatedly whether any hints could have led law enforcement to prevent the attack, Sen. Richard Burr, R-N.C., replied: “Explain to me how you do that without any bread crumbs that are obvious, without somebody that’s inside a mosque, that’s inside a person’s family that tips you off. In this particular case there was nothing like that that gave them a reason to look at this couple sooner than after the attack.”

More than three years ago, Farook’s longtime friend and relative-through-marriage Enrique Marquez bought the assault rifles used in the shooting.

Marquez, who checked himself into a mental hospital after the attack, told investigators that he and Farook were plotting an attack in 2012. Sen. Jim Risch of Idaho, a Republican who sits on the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, said they had an actual plan, including buying weapons, but became apprehensive and shelved it because of law enforcement activity and arrests in the area. Marquez hasn’t been charged with a crime.

Lawmakers said the FBI wouldn’t provide details about his ties to the case, citing an “ongoing criminal investigation.” Marquez’s mother, Armida Chacon, told reporters Thursday that her 24-year-old son is a good person.

Information for this article was contributed by Brian Melley, Michael R. Blood, Amanda Lee Myers, Alicia A. Caldwell, Asif Shahzad and Brian Skoloff of The Associated Press.

Print Headline: Two’s jihad talk went unnoticed

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Archived Comments

  • Jfish
    December 12, 2015 at 7:32 a.m.

    This is what happens when you have open borders and don't even enforce the laws that are on the books, everthing becomes more relaxed. Also, hard to believe that the family members knew nothing when one room was basically an arsenal. We cannot depend on family members or fellow mosque goers to report these kind of people. Marquez needs to be prosecuted also, the guy is apparently a bona fide idiot.

  • Jackabbott
    December 12, 2015 at 9:47 a.m.

    The mother in law lived in this place so she knew what was going on. Remember Donald Trump saying he believed all these people confide with their close family members and we should follow those leads. However, incompetence, political correctness, laziness all play a part her this and other acts of terrorism. We have people in very high governmental, media and business groups that are supporting either wittingly or unwittingly these people and what they do. I do not have to name names because most people political correct or not can smell a rat.

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