Records: Undercover FBI agent was near gunmen before attack
PHOENIX — An undercover FBI agent who was investigating terrorism was driving past two Arizona men just before they opened fire outside a Prophet Muhammad cartoon contest in suburban Dallas in 2015, court records show, raising questions about whether authorities could have done more to stop the attack.
The records emerged in the criminal case against Abdul Malik Abdul Kareem, a Phoenix man who was sentenced this week to 30 years in prison on criminal convictions that included providing support to the Islamic State group. The Associated Press assembled a timeline of the agent’s involvement through court records and interviews that show how the FBI was at the scene of an attack by Islamic State sympathizers.
Two of Kareem’s friends, Elton Simpson and Nadir Soofi, were armed with semi-automatic weapons, body armour and had a copy of the Islamic State flag when they arrived at the anti-Islam event in 2015. Investigators say Kareem had trained them on how to use the weapons and watched jihadist videos with them. He was one of the first people brought to trial in the U.S. on charges related to Islamic State.
Kareem wasn’t at the event in Garland, Texas, but the FBI was. Court records also show that the unidentified FBI agent was in contact with one of the gunmen days before the attack. In one social media exchange, the officer told Simpson, in a bid to keep the conversation going, “Tear up Texas.” The two attackers were killed in a shootout with police assigned to patrol the event, and a security guard was wounded.


