What they're not telling you: # shooting-that-killed-three.html" title="Shooters And Motives Revealed In San Diego Mosque Shooting That Killed Three" style="color:#1a1a1a;text-decoration:underline;text-decoration-style:dotted;font-weight:500;">SHOOTERS AND MOTIVES REVEALED IN SAN DIEGO MOSQUE SHOOTING THAT KILLED THREE A mother's 9:42 a.m. emergency call reporting her armed, suicidal son missing—nearly two hours before gunfire erupted at an Islamic center—raises hard questions about what police knew and when they knew it. On Monday, two young men—17-year-old Cain Clark and 18-year-old Caleb Velasquez—opened fire at the Islamic Center of San Diego and Bright Horizon Academy, a K-12 Islamic school eight miles north of downtown.
What the Documents Show
Three men were killed. Both shooters died of self-inflicted gunshots inside a white BMW located one block from the mosque. The sequence of events, however, reveals a critical gap between warning and response. At 9:42 a.m., one of the shooters' mothers called police directly. She reported that her son was missing, suicidal, and had taken her firearms and her vehicle.
Follow the Money
She also stated he was dressed in camouflage and accompanied by another person similarly dressed. This was nearly two hours before the 11:40 a.m. Police deployed license plate readers to track the vehicle and dispatched officers to a high school one of the alleged shooters attended and to a shopping mall where a potential match was flagged. Despite these resources mobilized in real time, contact was not established before the violence occurred. Physical evidence recovered at the scene describes a deliberate ideological motivation. Police found anti-Islamic writing inside the white BMW.
What Else We Know
A gasoline can bearing a Nazi SS sticker was located in the vehicle. Both shooters had written "hate speech" on their firearms—police have not yet released the specific text. One of the alleged shooters left a suicide note emphasizing "racial pride." After leaving the Islamic center, the two fired on a landscaper two blocks away, with one round grazing his helmet, though he sustained no serious injury. The weapons themselves remain undescribed in official statements, despite their role as physical evidence of intent. Police have not released the make, model, or caliber of the firearms, nor have they disclosed the exact text of either the hate speech inscribed on them or the suicide note referencing racial pride. These details matter for the historical record and for understanding the operational planning involved.
Primary Sources
- Source: ZeroHedge
- Category: Unexplained
- Cross-reference independently — don't take our word for it.
Disclosure: NewsAnarchist aggregates from public records, API feeds (Federal Register, CourtListener, MuckRock, Hacker News), and independent media. AI-assisted synthesis. Always verify primary sources linked above.

