FORT PIERCE, Fla. – A 32-year-old
Florida man has been arrested and is facing a charge of arson and hate
crime in a fire that heavily damaged a mosque that Orlando nightclub
gunman Omar Mateen attended, authorities announced Wednesday.
Joseph Michael Schreiber was arrested without
incident Wednesday afternoon and was being interrogated by investigators
looking into the fire set late Sunday at the Islamic Center of Fort
Pierce, said Maj. David Thompson of the St. Lucie County Sheriff's
Office.
Thompson told a news conference that Schreiber was
taken into custody on a street in Fort Pierce by authorities acting on
tips from members of the community and aided by surveillance video taken
from the mosque and elsewhere. He said the arson charge, coupled with a
hate crime enhancement under Florida law, carries a sentence of up to
30 years in prison.
The fire was set late Sunday on the 15th anniversary
of the 9/11 terror attacks. The blaze also coincided with the Muslim
holiday Eid al-Adha.
Thompson said a search warrant was executed at
Schreiber's home, where investigators reported finding evidence linked
to the arson, as well as anti-Islamic social media posts.
Schreiber was previously sentenced twice to state
prison for theft, according to records from the Florida Department of
Corrections. The records show he served his first sentence from March
2008 to July 2009 and his second from June 2010 to August 2014.
At the news conference, Thompson said detectives were
still questioning Schreiber on Wednesday evening, and he didn't say if
Schreiber had a lawyer.
No one was injured in the fire, which burned a
10-by-10-foot hole in the roof at the back of the mosque's main building
and blackened its eaves with soot.
Mateen was killed by police after opening fire at the
Pulse nightclub on June 12 in a rampage that left 49 victims dead and
53 wounded. He professed allegiance to the Islamic State group. His
father is among roughly 100 people who attend the mosque.
A weekend surveillance video from the mosque showed a
man on a motorcycle approaching the building with a bottle of liquid
and some papers, then leaving when there was a flash and shaking his
hand as though he may have burned it, Thompson said. The first 911 calls
were made about 45 minutes later after the fire had spread to the
attic. It took about four-and-a-half hours for firefighters to
extinguish the blaze.
No one had claimed responsibility for the attack, authorities said.
The FBI and the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco,
Firearms and Explosives joined the investigation into the fire.
Sheriff's officials had released the video and asked for the public's
help in identifying the arsonist.
Wilfredo Amr Ruiz, a spokesman for the Council on
American-Islamic Relations Florida, responded to social media posts by
Schreiber claiming to be a Jew who was fighting back.
"He obviously doesn't know about the efforts our
community is engaged in with our cousins, the Jews, not only in Florida
but throughout the nation," Ruiz said.
Omar Saleh, an attorney for CAIR, described both Schreiber and Mateen as "degenerates" and "punks."
"Just like on June 12, when I was stressing that
Mateen's actions do not speak on behalf of Islam, I know that whatever
religion Mr. Schreiber is, his actions do not speak on behalf of his
religion," Saleh said.
Saleh said the Muslim community will not seek revenge against Schreiber's family or any religious group he belongs to.
The fire was part of an escalating series of threats
and violence perpetuated against the mosque and its members, said
Wilfredo Amr Ruiz, a Florida spokesman for the Council of
American-Islamic Relations. He said the mosque began receiving
threatening phone calls shortly after the Pulse massacre. And in July,
he said, a member was punched in the face as he arrived for morning
prayers.
Sunday's fire has left the mosque's members "saddened and scared," said assistant imam Hamaad Rahman.
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