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10 Years After San Bernardino Terrorist Attack
Tuesday, December 2 marked 10 years since Syed Farook and Tashfeen Malik shot dead Robert Adams, Isaac Amianos, Bennetta Betbadal, Harry Bowman, Sierra Clayborn, Juan Espinoza, Aurora Godoy, Shannon Johnson, Larry Daniel Kaufman, Damien Meins, Tin Nguyen, Nicholas Thalasinos, Yvette Velasco, and Michael Wetzel, Farook’s co-workers at the Inland Regional Center in San Bernardino, California. Farook and Malik wounded more than 20 others before local police took them down after a car chase.
The deadly anniversary had journalist Beau Yarbrough wondering, “Why did the San Bernardino Mass Shooting Happen?” The 3,332-word article comes subtitled “childhood abuse, terrorism, workplace conflict and semi-automatic weapons combined in the murders of 14 people.” The order invites a closer look.
“The attack was committed by a man who had grown up in an abusive home,” writes Yarbrough, alluding to “mental health concerns such as depression, anxiety, and paranoia” on the part of Farook. He engaged in “workplace disputes,” but as the author notes, some months earlier, Farook’s co-workers held a baby shower for the couple’s newborn daughter. Co-workers also said Farook was a “typical” employee who did not stand out in any way.
The disputes could not have amounted to much, but Yarborough says the attack was “both a terrorist act and a workplace shooting.” That recalls President Obama’s branding of “soldier of Allah” Nidal Hasan’s murder of 13 soldiers at Ford Hood on Nov. 5, 2009, as “workplace violence,” not terrorism or even “gun violence.” (RELATED: What Is an American?)
Yarbrough profiles Syed Farook as a devout Muslim who “fantasized about committing violence of his own, inspired by terrorist groups that claimed they fought on behalf of Islam.” He read al Qaeda magazines with instructions about building radio-controlled pipe bombs. Farook and Muslim convert Enrique Marquez talked about tossing bombs into the library at Riverside City College, or onto the 91 freeway, all designed to maximize the number of casualties.
Yarbrough cites testimony from then-FBI director James Comey that Farook and Malik were “speaking about jihad and martyrdom before they became engaged.” Marquez procured semi-automatic rifles for the pair, and Farook’s mother, Rafia, shredded the “attack plans” the terrorists had drawn up. (RELATED: Trivializing Religion Left Us Unprepared for Political Islam)
Despite the careful planning and dedication to jihadism, Yarbrough concludes: “Childhood trauma. Online radicalization. Problems at work. None of these, alone or together, fully explains why Farook and his wife committed mass murder.” Missing in this account is the response of Kamala Harris, California’s attorney general at the time.
In a Dec. 17, 2015, statement, Harris mentioned “those who lost their lives in the recent attacks in Paris and San Bernardino,” but named not a single victim. They included blacks, Hispanics, and Asians, but no mention of a hate crime. The former San Francisco district attorney also failed to name Syed Farook and Tashfeen Malik and did not openly condemn their actions. Harris repeated that performance in a statement one year later, and the attorney general failed to attend a single victim’s funeral.
At this writing, on the 10th anniversary, Kamala Harris has yet to issue a statement. In 2015, Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom issued no statement, and on Dec. 2, 2025, the governor’s website contained nothing on the mass murder in San Bernardino.
As Yarbrough notes, the FBI called it a terrorist attack, but that was after the fact. The FBI failed to prevent the terrorist attacks of 9/11, Fort Hood, the Boston Marathon, San Bernardino, and Orlando, all with massive loss of life, and the bureau played no role in the takedown of the terrorists.
If families and friends of the San Bernardino 14 can be forgiven for believing that Farook and Malik were full-on Islamic jihadists out to maximize the number of casualties by any means necessary. If the families thought that government agencies, establishment politicians, and legacy media show little respect for the victims of terrorism, it would be hard to blame them.
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Lloyd Billingsley is a policy fellow at the Independent Institute in Oakland, Calif.