A Fearful
Phone Call and a Frantic Search Preceded Mosque Shooting
San Diego
police arrived to find three people dead. Nearby, they found two teenagers, the
attackers, dead in a car. The violence shattered an idyllic Southern California
city.
By Tim
Arango Christina
Morales Candice
Reed and Chelsia Rose Marcius
May 18,
2026
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/18/us/san-diego-mosque-shooting-search.html
The
frantic mother’s call came in at 9:42 a.m. on Monday: Her son was missing.
That
wasn’t all, she told the San Diego police. Several guns were gone, and so was
her car, and her 17-year-old might have a friend with him.
The
police were alarmed and began a desperate hunt for the two teenagers. They were
somewhere in California’s second largest city, a sprawling community of 1.4
million people nestled amid palms and purple jacarandas.
A license
plate reader seemed to show them near a mall, and officers rushed there. Then,
they converged on the high school one of the teenagers attended. Those turned
out to be the wrong places.
The
teens’ target was a mosque, the police said. They shot and killed three people
there, including a security guard who worked for the mosque and whose actions,
police said, likely saved lives. And then the teens killed themselves, the
police said.
The
grounds of the Islamic Center of San Diego, the largest mosque in San Diego
County, include a school.
“I’ll
tell you what got me,” Chief Scott Wahl of the San Diego Police Department said
at a news conference. “Watching kids come running out, just thankful to be
alive.”
The
shooting came amid increased threats and acts of violence against religious
institutions in America, fueled by the wars in the Middle East. In March, a man
attacked a synagogue outside Detroit with a truck before he died in a
confrontation with security guards. The growing threats have prompted increased
security at mosques, synagogues and churches across America.
In the
hours after the attack, a grim and familiar American ritual played out.
Politicians and other leaders condemned the violence, while officials in Los
Angeles and other major cities in the United States said that police officers
would increase patrols at religious sites.
“No one
should ever fear for their safety while attending prayers or studying in
elementary school,” said Tazheen Nizam, the executive director of the San Diego
chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations, which reported more civil
rights complaints by Muslims in 2025 than in any year since 1996.
In San
Diego, officers were dispatched to the mosque just before noon Monday. Drop
what you’re doing, they were told. People were reporting gunfire.
The first
officers on the scene found three dead men just outside the entrance to the
house of worship. As dozens of officers rushed inside, breaching doors and
going room to room, a fresh round of gunshots was reported a couple of blocks
away. There, police found a landscape worker who had been shot at. He was
unhurt, police said, but a bullet may have ricocheted off the helmet he wore.
A few
minutes later, the police discovered a vehicle in the street holding the two
dead suspects — one 17, the other 18. The teens, police said, had shot
themselves after unleashing carnage at the mosque.
In the
late morning, as the haze typical of a May in Southern California was burning
off, Vanessa Chavez was fixing herself an early lunch when she heard four
gunshots, one after another, coming from the direction of the nearby mosque.
She raced
to another room to get a better view, and saw a security guard get hit by at
least two gunshots, she said. Children playing outside were quickly herded in.
Soon, her
neighborhood, normally a quiet, leafy area shaded by eucalyptus trees and the
blooming jacarandas, resembled a war zone, with scores of officers, SWAT teams
and a helicopter circling overhead.
As
reporters and officials gathered at a park a block from the mosque, the
building’s entrance was taped off and quiet, but through the gates, a covered
body could be seen lying on the ground.
“Now
seeing that he lost his life, it was very brave of him,” Ms. Chavez, 46, said
in an interview, referring to the security guard.
Arturo
Gonzalez, a pro-immigrant activist in San Diego, was near the mosque when the
shooting began, and soon after saw panicked parents looking for their children.
“At
first, they weren’t letting them in,” said Mr. Gonzalez, 23. “Parents were
crying. It was really scary. And I actually shouted at a police officer to let
one mother in and they finally did.”
Chief
Wahl praised the slain guard as a hero. “I think it’s fair to say his actions
were heroic, and undoubtedly saved lives today,” he said.
As agents
from the F.B.I. and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives
rushed Monday afternoon to assist local police, some clues were starting to
emerge. Investigators began executing search warrants on Monday afternoon.
Chief
Wahl said investigators were collecting footage from the many security cameras
at the mosque.
“There is
going to be a tremendous amount of information and details that we’re going to
try and sort and put this puzzle back together again,” he said.
Investigators
recovered anti-Islamic writing in the car where the suspects were found dead,
according to two law enforcement officials briefed on the matter who requested
anonymity because they were not authorized to share details publicly. The words
“hate speech” were written on one of the guns used in the attack.
Chief
Wahl said investigators had not uncovered any threats toward a specific place.
Still, “there was definitely hate rhetoric involved,” Chief Wahl said.
The
Islamic Center is not just a place of worship but also a community center, a
place for people to gather. There is a library and a busy schedule of classes
unrelated to religion, such as smoking cessation groups, said Linda Sarsour, a
Brooklyn-based activist and advocate for Muslims who has visited the place many
times. She is friends with the center’s imam, Taha Hassane.
“You drop
your kids off at school and then you might go hang out with your friends at the
mosque because they have a lounge area, like a coffee shop,” Ms. Sarsour said.
“It’s one of those kinds of places that’s not just like you go pray at the
mosque and you leave.”
Mr.
Hassane, addressing reporters in a park late Monday afternoon, said, “My
community is mourning. This is something we have never expected to take place,
but at the same time, the religious intolerance and the hate, unfortunately,
that exists in our nation is unprecedented. All of us, we are responsible for
spreading the culture of tolerance, the culture of love.”
Pooja
Salhotra contributed reporting.
Tim
Arango is a correspondent covering national news. He is based in Los Angeles.
Christina
Morales is a national reporter for The Times.
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