Orlando nightclub shooter's widow pleads not guilty
The
widow of the man who killed 49 people at an Orlando gay nightclub last
year pleaded not guilty in a federal court in Oakland, California, on
Wednesday to allegations that she aided her husband ahead of the
massacre.
Noor Salman
-- widow of Omar Mateen -- was arrested earlier this week at her
parents' home in the San Francisco suburb of Rodeo, more than seven
months and 2,400 miles removed from the June 12 killings in Florida, the
deadliest mass shooting in US history.
A
grand jury charged her this month with obstruction of justice and
aiding and abetting her husband's material support to ISIS. Dressed in a
red jail uniform, she looked shaken Wednesday as a public defender
pleaded not guilty on her behalf to all charges.
At the end of the hearing, she turned around and blew a kiss to her uncle, Al Salman, who blew a kiss back.
A bail hearing was scheduled for February 1.
Noor
Salman's family has maintained that she didn't know that Mateen was
going to commit the June 12 massacre at the Pulse nightclub in Orlando,
about a two-hour drive southeast of their Fort Pierce, Florida, home.
Wednesday's
hearing was a continuation of a proceeding that started Tuesday, when
Assistant US Attorney Roger Handberg laid out the allegations in broad
strokes.
"She knew he was going to conduct the attack," Handberg told Magistrate Judge Donna Ryu on Tuesday.
The government will want the case heard in Florida, Handberg said.
Uncle: 'She didn't know'
Salman,
who married Mateen in 2011 and lived with him in Fort Pierce, came
under scrutiny as authorities investigated the gunman, who killed 49 people
and injured more than 50 others when he opened fire at Pulse. Mateen
pledged allegiance to the Islamist militant group ISIS in phone calls
with 911 and the media before dying in a shootout with police.
Authorities interviewed Salman after the shooting, but she remained free until Monday.
At issue was how much of Mateen's intentions she knew ahead of time.
Outside the courtroom Tuesday, Al Salman described his niece as a sweet woman who knew nothing of the attack ahead of time.
"She is a very simple person. She didn't know what's going on," he told a throng of reporters.
She swore to him that she had "no idea what that crazy guy is doing," the uncle said.
"She don't like to see anybody get hurt."
Officials: Evidence will show she's complicit
Court
documents spelling out the indictment allege, without elaborating, that
Noor aided and abetted her husband from at least April onward. An
official told CNN on condition of anonymity that evidence will show she
was complicit and had to know her husband was going to do something
bad.
Her Florida-based attorney said Salman had no prior knowledge that her husband would kill anyone at Pulse.
"Noor
Salman had no foreknowledge nor could she predict what Omar Mateen
intended to do that tragic night," family attorney Linda Moreno of
Tampa, Florida, said Monday.
"Noor
has told her story of abuse at his hands. We believe it is misguided and
wrong to prosecute her and that it dishonors the memories of the
victims to punish an innocent person."
Investigators
believe Salman acted of her own free will and knowingly took steps to
obstruct the probe into the massacre, according to a law enforcement
official. The official said Salman's assertions she was coerced through
her husband's abusive behavior did not stand up.
What she said, according to investigators
Salman
grew up in Rodeo after her parents had emigrated from the West Bank in
1985, according to The New York Times. She told the Times that she met
Mateen on a dating site in 2011 and the couple married later that year.
They settled in Fort Pierce. They have a son, who was 3 at the time of the Pulse shooting.
Salman gave conflicting accounts about what she knew of Mateen's intentions in the hours before the attack, authorities said.
Salman told the FBI her husband said he wanted to carry out a jihadist
attack. But she denied knowledge of his plans, a law enforcement
official told CNN last year.
Two law enforcement officials previously told CNN that months before the attack,
Mateen added the name of his wife to his life insurance policy and made
sure she had access to his bank accounts. In May, the gunman
transferred his share of a home to his sister and brother-in-law for
$10.
Mateen also bought his wife an expensive piece of jewelry, the sources said.
Salman
told investigators that in the weeks leading up to the attack, Mateen
spent thousands of dollars, buying among other things the guns used in
the massacre. In April, he visited Disney World with his wife, and
Disney security officials believe he was conducting surveillance, a law
enforcement official told CNN.
Two
days before the attack, he left his house angry and was carrying a bag
of guns, law enforcement officials said, citing Salman's account to
investigators. Salman said she begged her husband not to leave and
grabbed him by the arm, the officials said.
Two
hours after the attack started, Mateen texted his wife at 4 a.m. and
asked her whether she had heard any news about the shooting. At one
point, Salman sent a text to Mateen saying that she loved him, a law
enforcement official said.
Last
year Mateen's ex-wife, Sitora Yusufiy, described a brief but violent
relationship to a man whom she was only able to escape through her
family's help. She said he was physically abusive and a steroid abuser.
Seven-month gap between massacre, arrest
The
complexities of gathering evidence to allege that someone helped Mateen
may help explain the seven-month gap between the shooting and arrest,
CNN terrorist analyst Phil Mudd said.
"Building
a case that says not only was she aware that he bought a weapon and
that he traveled to Pulse, but that she was somehow cognizant that he
was going to commit an act of violence, that's pretty tough when you
have only two people participating and one is dead," Mudd said.
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