A minnesota store robbery sport turned out to be something much more disastrous, with the police claiming that the suspicious upset was conspiring to carry out shots of religious “massive victims” in a matter of hours.
Mohamed Adan Mohamed, 24, was arrested on April 17 after a Mankato sporting articles store was removed with more than $ 2,000 in ammunition magazines, body armor and bear spray, according to load documents of Blue Earth County county.
Store employees had noticed Mohamed, walkeding on the store with a large jacket, medical mask and hat, and grabbing successful shelves from the shelves without verifying prices.
When they confronted it, he explained that he was buying supplies for his AR style rifle, according to the documents.

The police were called to the scene about the reports of a suspicious person, but before they could arrive, Mohamed ran with the products while the store’s safety tried to stop him. Then jump to a minivan without plates and quickly moved away, jumping a sidewalk and almost hitting someone in the process, they alleged the documents.
However, he left a shopping list on the scene, labeled as “list of survival equipment with alternative”, which included a sleeping sack, weapons magazines, pepper spray, knives, lighters and arc and arrows.
One of the officers who replied that they reviewed the strange list recalled a recent investigation into a local man who had been publishing videos of his own weapons signage in the camera.
And the hashtags in those videos, supposedly published by Mohamed, read “Deathtoamerikkan and Israelliimperialism,” according to the police.
The researchers discovered that a Siena who coincides with the view on the scene was registered in the Mohamed direction in the nearby St. Peter, and determined that “there were strong indicators that Mohamed was prepared to carry out some event of victims of type or carving account.”
The researchers registered Mohamed’s house and found an assault rifle and two 3D printed weapons. He was now arrested at home.

The neighbors said they are sad for Mohamed’s trial but not completely surprised. A former classmate recalled that he had bones fighting mental health from high school.
“We grew together in San Pedro, and it’s heartbreaking,” said a neighbor named Dunia to CBS Minnesota. “We started seeing Mohamed start talking with themselves, not socializing with us, with children.”
“It has a very beautiful heart,” he added. “He is a really good guy. It’s fair, he is not mentally, physically there at this time.”
Mohamed was accused of theft of serious crimes and threats of violence. Both positions could carry sentences of up to five years in prison.
