WACO — Angry over two wars and supportive of an Army psychiatrist accused of shooting 45 people on Fort Hood, Pfc. Naser Abdo came to Killeen looking to even the score, an FBI agent suggested Tuesday.
At Killeen police headquarters after Abdo's arrest last summer, FBI agent Charles Michael Owens said Abdo waived his Miranda rights and explained why he'd come from Fort Campbell, Ky.
“He stated he wanted to do it for the sake of the men and women of Afghanistan, that they had been wronged,” Owens said, adding that Abdo also hoped to support alleged Fort Hood mass shooter Nidal Malik Hasan, a fellow Muslim soldier he felt was mistreated in the Army over his faith.
As testimony opened here, a picture of Abdo's journey from Fort Campbell to a budget hotel within walking distance of Fort Hood came into focus. The trail was littered with cash purchases, time-stamped receipts and videos that prosecutors used to build their case.
Everywhere he went, from a Wal-Mart in Plano to Guns Galore in Killeen, where Abdo bought a type of smokeless powder that could be used to set off a homemade bomb, he aroused suspicion.
In Kentucky, a gun store clerk refused to sell him a .40-caliber handgun he'd selected for its “knock-down” power and called an MP commander. Workers at Guns Galore were so alarmed they phoned police, a move that ended in Abdo's arrest.