Bomb squad inspects package sent to address of San Bernardino shooters

A bomb squad inspected a package at a UPS facility in Southern California after a driver discovered it was addressed to the home of the San Bernardino shooters.

Tashfeen Malik and her husband, Syed Rizwan Farook, burst into a holiday party for the environmental health department the latter worked for and opened fire this week.

Fourteen people died and 21 others were injured in the mass shooting Wednesday. The couple died elsewhere in a shootout with police.

Days after the massacre, a UPS driver noticed a package headed for delivery Friday night had their Redlands townhouse address, San Bernardino Police Chief Jarrod Burguan tweeted.

It was returned to the distribution facility, where bomb technicians were deployed out of caution. The package was found to be safe and “posed no threat,” Burguan tweeted.

He did not say what was in the package.

‘Act of terrorism’

Days after the massacre that stunned the nation, more details are emerging.

The FBI took over the investigation from local authorities Friday, saying the mass shooting is now being investigated as “an act of terrorism.”

There was “evidence … of extreme planning,” said David Bowdich, assistant director of the FBI office in Los Angeles.

While the shooting was underway, the female shooter posted a pledge of allegiance to ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi on Facebook, three U.S. officials told CNN.

The post was made on an account with a different name, one U.S. official said. Facebook said it later took down the post because it violated community standards that prohibit the promotion of terrorism or the glorification of violence.

Facebook declined to go into details about the nature of the post.

Inspired by ISIS?

The mass shooting may have been inspired by ISIS, a law enforcement official said, but none of the officials said ISIS directed or ordered the attack.

ISIS has called for people worldwide to launch attacks in its name. It has not claimed responsibility for what happened in San Bernardino.

Relatives had no idea that the couple held radical views, according to family lawyers.

Nor did they know the couple had a makeshift bomb lab in the apartment they shared with their 6-month-old daughter.

“It just doesn’t make sense for these two to be able to act like some kind of Bonnie and Clyde or something,” Farook’s family attorney David S. Chesley said.

“It’s just ridiculous. It doesn’t add up.”

A law enforcement source said another option investigators are looking into is whether a workplace issue with religion may have sparked the killings.

The couple did not have any trouble with the law nor were they on any list of potentially radicalized people.

Middle East connections

Malik was born and raised in Pakistan and moved to Saudi Arabia at age 19. It’s not known what connections she may have had with any terrorists or groups.

Investigators are exploring Farook’s communications with at least one person who was under investigation for possible terror connections. Some were by phone, some on social media.

Family lawyer Mohammad Abuershaid said that Farook traveled twice to Saudi Arabia — first in 2013 for the Hajj, the annual pilgrimage to Mecca that Muslims are required to make at least once in their lifetimes, then again to marry Malik, whom he’d met through an online dating service.

The FBI said he went to Pakistan as well, but the family attorneys denied that.

Weapons everywhere

Shortly after the massacre, authorities searched the couple’s house and found pipe bombs, thousands of rounds of ammunition and more guns.

The shooters didn’t make it easy for authorities to track their digital footprints.

The hard drive from their computer is gone, and two relatively new cell phones were found smashed in a garbage can, law enforcement officials said.

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