Rizwan Farook Farook was born on June 14, 1987, in
Chicago, United States, as one of four children to
Muslim immigrant parents.
Personal life According to sources, Farook had a "troubled childhood" and grew up in an abusive home in which his alcoholic father was often violent towards his mother. Farook grew up in
Riverside, California, and attended
La Sierra High School, graduating in 2004, one year early. He attended
California State University, San Bernardino, and received a
bachelor's degree in
environmental health in either 2009 or 2010. He was a student for one semester in 2014 at
California State University, Fullerton in their graduate program for
environmental engineering, but never completed the program. Farook had a profile on the
dating website iMilap.com, in which he listed backyard
target practice as a hobby. A lawyer for Farook's family also said that he would go to
firing ranges by himself. Farook worked as a
food inspector for the San Bernardino County Department of Public Health for five years before the shooting. During that time, according to friends, he never discussed politics. Farook abruptly stopped going to the mosque in 2014 following his marriage. The Italian newspaper
La Stampa reported that Farook's father said that his son "shared the ideology of
Al Baghdadi to create an Islamic state" and that he was fixated with Israel. A spokesperson for the
Council on American–Islamic Relations (CAIR) later claimed the father did not recall making these statements about his son.
Tashfeen Malik Tashfeen Malik was born in
Karor Lal Esan, Pakistan, located southwest of
Islamabad. Her landowning family was described as politically influential in the town. According to her family, Malik and her father lived in
Jidda, Saudi Arabia, between 1990 and 2007, though
Saudi Interior Ministry spokesman Major General Mansour Al-Turki denied reports that Malik grew up in his country, saying that she visited Saudi Arabia only for a few weeks in 2008 and again in 2013.
Studies in Multan Malik returned to Pakistan to study
pharmacology at
Bahauddin Zakariya University in
Multan, beginning the program in 2007 and graduating in 2012. The city of Multan has been linked to
jihadist activity. While in Multan, Malik attended the local center of the
Al-Huda International Seminary, a women-only
religious academy network with seminaries across Pakistan and branches in the U.S. and Canada that was founded in 1994. The school is aligned with the
Wahhabi form of Sunni Islam.
The New York Times reported that the institute "teaches a strict literalist interpretation of the Quran, although it does not advocate violent jihad." An Al-Huda administrator from the head office in Islamabad said that terrorism "is against the teachings of Islam" and that the school's curriculum did not endorse violence. Malik joined Farook in California shortly after their wedding. A U.S. marriage certificate reported their marriage in Riverside on August 16, 2014. At the time of her death, Malik and Farook had a six-month-old daughter. Malik entered the United States on a
K-1 (fiancée) visa with a
Pakistani passport. According to a
State Department spokesman, all applicants for such visas are fully screened. Malik's application for permanent residency (a "
green card") was completed by Farook on her behalf in September 2014, and she was granted a conditional green card in July 2015. Malik reportedly had become very religious in the years before the attack, wearing both the
niqab and
burqa while urging others to do so as well. Pakistani media reported that Malik had ties to the radical
Red Mosque in
Islamabad, but a cleric and a spokesman from the mosque vehemently denied these claims, saying that they had never heard of Malik before the shooting. Malik's estranged relatives say that she had left the
moderate Islam of her family and had become
radicalized while living in Saudi Arabia. Saudi Interior Ministry spokesman Al-Turki rejected this claim, stating that Saudi officials received no indication that Malik was radicalized while living there.
Internet activities On December 16, 2015,
FBI Director James B. Comey said, "We can see from our investigation that in late 2013, before there is a physical meeting of these two people [Farook and Malik] resulting in their engagement and then journey to the United States, they are communicating online, showing signs in that communication of their joint commitment to jihadism and to martyrdom. Those communications are direct, private messages." Early reports had erroneously stated that Malik had openly expressed jihadist beliefs on social media, leading to calls for U.S. immigration officials to routinely review social media as part of background checks, which is not part of the current procedure. As a result, Comey said that "untangling the motivations of which particular terrorist
propaganda motivated in what way remains a challenge in these investigations, and our work is ongoing there." == Planning of the attack ==