FBI director calls Texas hostage situation 'act of terrorism targeting the Jewish community'
FBI said the hostage situation was an 'act of terrorism targeting the Jewish community'
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Federal Bureau of Investigations Director Christopher Wray called Saturday's hostage situation at a Colleyville, Texas synagogue an "act of terrorism targeting the Jewish community."
Wray made the comments during an address given to the Anti-Defamation League during a webinar on Wednesday.
"Now let me be clear and blunt, the FBI is, and has been, treating Saturday’s events as an act of terrorism targeting the Jewish community. Within a matter of hours, we deployed FBI SWAT, two highly trained units from our elite Hostage Rescue Team; those are the folks who ultimately were the ones who went into the synagogue, along with canines," Wray said.
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Authorities say Malik Faisal Akram, 44, a British national, entered the Congregation Beth Israel on Saturday and took Jewish worshippers hostage.
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All hostages escaped after nearly 11 hours with the hostage-taker dead.
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At a news conference after the hostages were released, FBI Special Agent in Charge Matt DeSarno said that "the Texas synagogue hostage taker's demands were specifically focused on issues not connected to the Jewish community."
During the event on Wednesday, Wray said that the FBI's Joint Terrorism Task Force will continue to investigate the incident.
"Our Joint Terrorism Task Forces all across the country will continue to investigate why this individual specifically targeted Congregation Beth Israel on their day of worship," Wray said.
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Wray added that multiple FBI units assisted with the incident while it was still active on Saturday.
"We had our crisis management unit, our counter-IED unit. You may remember that for a good part of Saturday we were concerned that the suspect had one or more bombs in his possession. So those folks and others, there were a total of about 60 flown in quickly from our Critical Incident Response Group in Quantico, on the ground working with our terrific partners in state and local law enforcement to bring the situation to a safe resolution for the hostages," he said.
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The FBI director also said that Jewish community faces multiple threats from "across the hate spectrum," and that his agency considers "the enduring threats to the Jewish community to be among our very highest priorities."