Teenage gunmen open fire on San Diego mosque, killing 3 men and then
themselves
[May 19, 2026]
By JULIE WATSON and EUGENE JOHNSON
SAN DIEGO (AP) — Two teenage shooters opened fire at a San Diego mosque
on Monday and killed three men — then killed themselves a few blocks
away — in an attack police are investigating as a hate crime.
There was no specific threat made against the Islamic Center of San
Diego but authorities found evidence that the suspects engaged in
“generalized hate rhetoric," San Diego Police Chief Scott Wahl said. He
declined to give more details, but said the “circumstances that led up
to this” would come out in the days ahead.
Before the attack, officers were already looking for one of the
teenagers since his mother called police concerned that her son was
suicidal and had run away, Wahl said. There were weapons missing from
the home and the mother's vehicle was gone, he added.
The search took on even more urgency as police learned that he was
dressed in camouflage and with an acquaintance — details that were
unexpected for someone about to die by suicide, he said.
Police began using whatever technology they could to find the 17- and
18-year-old, including automated license plate readers. The department
dispatched authorities to a mall near where the car had been tracked by
police, and officers alerted a school where at least one of the suspects
had been a student, Wahl said.
As officers continued interviewing the mother about places the teens
might be, they got reports of a shooting at the mosque.

Among those killed was a mosque security guard, who police believe
“played a pivotal role” in keeping the attack from being “much worse,”
Wahl said.
“It’s fair to say his actions were heroic,” the chief said at a later
news conference. “Undoubtedly he saved lives today."
A family friend identified the guard as Amin Abdullah, a well-known face
at the mosque who had been working there for more than a decade.
“He wanted to defend the innocent so he decided to become a security
guard,” said Shaykh Uthman Ibn Farooq, who had spoken with Abdullah's
son. The family could not immediately be reached for comment.
The center is the largest mosque in San Diego County and includes the Al
Rashid School, which offers courses in Arabic language, Islamic studies
and the Quran for students ages 5 and up, according to its website.
Police responded within four minutes of being called, Wahl said. As they
arrived, gunshots rang out a few blocks away where a landscaper was shot
at but uninjured. The shooters were found dead in a vehicle stopped in
the middle of a road nearby, he said.
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People embrace near the scene of a shooting outside the Islamic
Center of San Diego Monday, May 18, 2026, in San Diego. (AP
Photo/Gregory Bull)

Aerial TV footage showed more than a dozen children holding hands
and being walked out of the parking lot of the center as it was
surrounded by scores of police vehicles. The mosque is in a
neighborhood of homes, apartments and strip malls with Middle
Eastern restaurants and markets.
Parents were directed to a nearby area to retrieve their children.
The mosque's director, Imam Taha Hassane, called it “extremely
outrageous to target a place of worship.”
“All the places of worship in our beautiful city should always be
protected,” he said.
He added that the center focused on interfaith relations and
community building, and that a group of non-Muslims had been touring
the mosque earlier Monday to learn about Islam.
The Islamic Center’s website says its mission is to not only serve
the Muslim population but also to “work with the larger community to
serve the less fortunate, to educate, and to better our nation.”
Five daily prayers are held there, and the mosque works with other
organizations and people of all faiths on social causes.
The Council on American-Islamic Relations, one of the largest Muslim
civil rights and advocacy groups in the U.S., condemned the
shooting.
“No one should ever fear for their safety while attending prayers or
studying at an elementary school,” said CAIR-San Diego Executive
Director Tazheen Nizam in a statement. “We are working to learn more
about this incident and we encourage everyone to keep this community
in your prayers.”
President Donald Trump called the shooting a “terrible situation.”
_____
Johnson reported from Seattle. Associated Press writers Jaimie Ding
in Los Angeles and Hannah Schoenbaum in Salt Lake City contributed
to this report.
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