Police, Wife: Orlando Shooter May Have Scouted Disney Properties For Attack

Orlando Disneyland shooter
Friends and family members hold a sign featuring Mickey Mouse on Monday in downtown Orlando, Fla., after a lone gunman shot and killed 49 nightclub attendees and wounded more than another fifty victims at the Pulse gay nightclub on Sunday. Photo by Gary I Rothstein/UPI

ORLANDO, Fla., June 14 (UPI) — The FBI is working to determine if Omar Seddique Mateen, the accused gunman in the Pulse nightclub massacre, had other potential targets including Orlando’s Walt Disney World.

Mateen reportedly visited other gay venues in addition to Pulse, and authorities believe he visited Walt Disney World. FBI agents do not yet know if he was evaluating the locations as potential terror targets.

Disney did not confirm or deny Mateen visited the park to the Orlando Sentinel, instead describing increased security measures such as additional police and canine units. A Disney manager speaking under the condition of anonymity told the newspaper Mateen visited the theme park in April.

Mateen’s wife, now cooperating with the FBI, told investigators her husband may have scouted multiple locations for his planned attack, including multiple Disney properties near Orlando, a senior counter-terrorism official told ABC News.

The Orange County Sheriff’s Office, which provides police services to Disney, said it had no public record of Mateen, while FBI Director James Comey said his agency was working to determine whether Mateen visited the park.

Mateen is accused of killing 49 people during a rampage early Sunday at Orlando’s Pulse nightclub, a venue considered a haven for the LGBT community. Police said the assault began with a gunfight between Mateen and an off-duty police officer working security for Pulse at about 2 a.m. — last call at the bar.

Once additional officers arrived and exchanged gunfire with Mateen, the shooter retreated within the venue — eventually protecting himself within a bathroom where dozens of people were hiding. A hostage situation was born. The most deadly mass shooting in U.S. history lasted for three hours.

Authorities said Mateen used a “.223 caliber AR-type rifle and a 9mm semiautomatic pistol.” A third weapon found in Mateen’s vehicle is being traced.

Before and during the shooting, Mateen communicated three times with Orlando’s 911 emergency dispatch. In the first call, he said nothing and hung up. He then called back and spoke briefly before hanging up. The dispatcher called him back and they spoke briefly once again.

During those calls, the gunman said he carried out the attack for Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi and pledged allegiance to the militant Islamist organization. He also said he pledged solidarity to the Tsarnaev brothers who carried out the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing and to an American who carried out a bombing in Syria for the al-Nusra Front, an al-Qaida affiliate — who the FBI said the gunman knew as they attended the same mosque.

Orlando Police Chief John Mina made the decision to carry out a rescue operation after hearing that the gunman made statements about “explosives, about possible bomb vests,” which were later determined to be fake.

“We believed loss of life was imminent,” Mina said during a press conference on Monday. “I made the decision to commence the rescue operation.”

A SWAT team was called in and authorities planned to execute an explosive breach through a bathroom wall to rescue the hostages. The explosion did not work successfully, so police used a BearCat armored vehicle to smash into the wall — creating a hope 2- to 3-feet wide. About 30 people ran through the hole.

The gunman also came out of the hole and engaged police in a final firefight. He was killed.

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