The man suspected in a fatal shooting rampage hid behind a potted plant in a Jewish charity's foyer and forced his way through a security door by holding a gun to a 13-year-old girl's head, the police chief said.
Once inside, police say, Naveed Afzal Haq opened fire with two semiautomatic pistols. One woman, Pam Waechter, 58, of Seattle was killed at the scene. Five more women were wounded.
Haq, a Pakistani-American who is Muslim, told authorities he was angered by the war in Iraq and US military cooperation with Israel.
PHOTO: AP
"He pointedly blamed the Jewish people for all of these problems," Seattle Police Chief Gil Kerlikowske said at a news conference on Saturday.
Haq, 30, was ordered held on US$50 million bail on Saturday pending formal charges of murder and attempted murder.
According to a statement of probable cause, Haq told an emergency services dispatcher: "These are Jews and I'm tired of getting pushed around and our people getting pushed around by the situation in the Middle East."
Muhammad Ullah, a close family friend and a senior member of a mosque founded in part by Haq's father, described Haq as a quiet loner with few friends.
Haq's parents, originally from Lahore, Pakistan, are devastated and unable to understand how their son strayed so far from Islamic teachings, Ullah said.
"I couldn't find in any religious book any justification for such heinous acts," he said. "It has no place in Islam."
In a statement, the Islamic Center of the Tri-Cities offered condolences to the shooting victims and said "we disassociate this act from our Islamic teachings and beliefs."
Police said Haq picked up the two handguns just days earlier, and appeared to have targeted the federation after a cursory Internet search for Jewish organizations.
He also was stopped shortly before the shootings in Seattle for a minor traffic infraction, and was cited and released, Kerlikowske said. Haq had a valid driver's license and his actions did not raise any suspicion, the chief said.
One of the women wounded in Friday's shooting -- hit in the arm as she shielded her pregnant belly -- helped bring the crisis to an end by crawling into her office, calling emergency services, and convincing her assailant to talk to dispatchers, Kerlikowske said.
"She's a hero in my eyes," he said at a news conference.
That woman, Dayna Klein, 37, was hospitalized at Harborview Medical Center along with the four others wounded.
The 13-year-old girl taken hostage at the beginning of the melee was not shot, police said.
When Haq got on the phone with emergency services operators, he identified himself by name and said, "This is a hostage situation and I want these Jews to get out," according to a statement of probable cause.
At one point, he told the dispatcher he wanted police to call the media and that he had a gun pointed at a woman's head. He said he was acting alone and had not been drinking, court documents said.
Police and the FBI are labeling the shootings a hate crime.
Haq entered the King County courtroom on Saturday wearing handcuffs, chains and leg shackles, and a white jail jumpsuit that labeled him an "ultra security inmate."
Before entering, Haq requested that he be allowed to not personally attend the hearing, or for him to not be photographed or videotaped. District Judge Barbara Linde denied both requests.
Haq briefly glanced at rows of news media in the gallery on his way into the courtroom but otherwise showed no outward emotion.
Waechter, an assistant director at the federation, was described by colleagues as a tireless worker for the Jewish community in Seattle.
"She was a person everybody loved, everybody enjoyed being with," said Rabbi Jim Mirel of Temple B'nai Torah, where Waechter was a past president.
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