Rafia
Sultana Shareef, a.k.a. Rafia Farook, 66, of Corona, has agreed to plead guilty
to a one-count information charging her with alteration, destruction, and
mutilation of records. The criminal information and related plea agreement were
filed Monday in United States District Court in Riverside, and the documents
became publicly available today.
Shareef is
scheduled to make her initial appearance in federal court in Riverside on March
16.
According to
her plea agreement, on December 2, 2015, Shareef was living at a Redlands
residence she shared with her son and his wife, Tashfeen Malik, and her
grandchild. At approximately 8 a.m. on that day, Farook and Malik left the
family home and left their infant child with Shareef, falsely telling her that
they were going to a medical appointment.
Instead,
Farook and Malik drove a black SUV that Farook had rented a few days earlier to
the Inland Regional Center (IRC) in San Bernardino. Farook entered the IRC
alone, while Malik waited inside the SUV, which was parked at the IRC parking
lot. Farook placed a bag containing a bomb in a conference room where his
coworkers were holding an event. After some time, Farook and Malik left the
IRC, then returned at approximately 10:58 a.m. dressed in black tactical gear.
Approaching
the IRC on foot from the exterior, Farook and Malik opened fire using
high-powered firearms on individuals outside and inside the venue, killing 14 people
and wounding at least 22 others. At approximately 11:01 a.m., Farook and Malik
departed the IRC and began driving around San Bernardino. A few hours later,
Farook and Malik engaged in a firefight with law enforcement officers that
resulted in the wounding of one policeman and their own deaths.
Sometime
between 11:43 a.m. and 3:06 p.m., while Shareef was still at her home, she
learned that law enforcement had identified her son as a suspect in the IRC
attack, the plea agreement states. In the presence of family members that
afternoon, Shareef expressed her belief that her son and daughter-in-law had
perpetrated the IRC attack, according to the plea agreement.
Prior to
leaving the family home with her infant grandchild at 3:41 p.m., Shareef went
into her son’s bedroom, grabbed at least one document that appeared to be a
map, and fed it into a shredder, according to the plea agreement. Shareef
admitted that she knew her son had produced the document, and she believed it
was directly related to his planning of the IRC attack.
Once she
pleads guilty to the felony charge, Shareef will face a maximum statutory
sentence of 20 years in federal prison, but the plea agreement contemplates a
sentence of no more than 18 months.
This matter was investigated by the FBI.
This case stems from the broader investigation of the San Bernardino attack by
members of the Inland Empire Joint Terrorism Task Force, which includes the
FBI; the San Bernardino Police Department; the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s
Department; the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives; Homeland
Security Investigations; the Riverside County Sheriff’s Department; the San
Bernardino County District Attorney’s Office; the Chino Police Department; the
Redlands Police Department; the Ontario Police Department; the Corona Police
Department; and the Riverside Police Department.
The case
against Shareef is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorneys
Christopher D. Grigg, Chief of the Terrorism and Export Crimes Section; Melanie
Sartoris of the General Crimes Section; and Julius J. Nam of the Criminal
Appeals Section. Justice Department Trial Attorneys Alicia Cook and C.
Alexandria Bogle of the National Security Division’s Counterterrorism Section
provided substantial support.
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