RedHanded - The Pulse Nightclub Shooting | #454
Episode Date: June 11, 2026When Omar Mateen stepped into Orlando’s Pulse nightclub and fired into the crowd, 10 years ago this week, it was the start of three hours of unimaginable terror for the city’s gay community. The ...Islamic State claimed responsibility. The FBI rushed to explain it. The media searched for answers.But as investigators uncovered Mateen’s history, the picture only got more complicated. There were zero clear ties to any terrorist groups. And then, reports emerged that he had been a regular at the club, flirting and dancing with patrons, going back years. Whatever the 2016 Pulse attack was – devastating, senseless, heartbreaking, profound – it was not simple.On the 10th anniversary of the Pulse shooting, Hannah and Suruthi revisit the tragedy, and ask what really drove one of the deadliest attacks in modern American history.--Patreon - Ad-free & Bonus EpisodesYouTube - Full-length Video EpisodesTikTok / Instagram
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A few minutes before 2 a.m. on the 12th of June 2016, a van pulled up outside the Pulse Nightclub in Orlando, Florida.
Driving was 29-year-old Omar Mateen.
He'd made the two-hour trip alone from his home in South Florida with an AR-15-type rifle and handgun on the back seat.
Pulse was one of Orlando's biggest clubs
and it attracted a hell of a crowd at the weekend
especially on its upscale Latin Saturdays
a crowd of hundreds of mostly gay, mostly Latino men
gathered together to dance to salsa and meringuei
until the small hours.
Most of them were regulars.
Anyone who's ever been to a gay club
will know that it's much more than a place
to buy expensive cocktails and let loose on the sticky dance floor.
If you're me, it's someone.
where to make enemies of bouncers.
A gay club is meant to be a haven of acceptance,
a place to connect and be free,
but sometimes hate finds a way in.
And on this night, it walked in through the front door.
What followed was the deadliest mass shooting
the US had ever seen until that day.
Matine walked in and fired hundreds of rounds
into the unsuspecting crowd.
bodies collapsed and within minutes the floor was slick with blood.
Those who could ran for the exits,
but many were trapped in bathroom stools or behind bars or DJ decks
and they were stuck there for three long hours of unimaginable terror.
49 people were killed that night.
Just before he started this murderous rampage,
Matine had made a statement.
He had clearly pledged his allegiance to the Islamic State,
and afterwards, IS itself, claimed the attack.
In the aftermath of this nightmare, alongside the horror, there was confusion.
On the face of it, it looks like yet another nightmarish attack on Western liberal values
from a man mired in medieval fundamentalist Islamist ideology.
And while that was certainly true, there's another element to this story.
Because some of the pulse regulars actually recognised Matine.
They remembered him from the bar.
Some said he was there most weeks.
And some even said he'd flirted with them, dance with them, maybe even more.
Whatever the 2016 pulse attack was,
devastating, senseless, heartbreaking, profound.
It was not simple, and the scars it left on a community
will last for generations.
I'm Hannah.
I'm Surruti.
This is red-handed.
And the truth behind the horrific pulse shooting
on the 10-year anniversary of the massacre.
After the attack, a crowd gathered in the early morning hours
to wait for any word about friends or relatives who had been inside.
And as the most horrific night in Orlando's history gave way to a grim, somber day,
investigators got to work finding out everything they could about the man with the gun.
And thankfully, they already had a name, Omar Mateen.
But who was he? And how had he slipped through their net?
Matine's parents, Sadiq and Shalah Matine, had emigrated from Afghanistan to New York.
And that is where Omar was born in 1986.
When he was still young, he, his parents and his three sisters moved to Port St. Lucie,
a sunny city on the coast halfway between Miami and Orlando.
And in a lot of ways, Matine had a pretty regular.
90s American childhood.
Obviously, as an Afghan immigrant family, the Matines stood out a bit.
But outwardly at least, they seemed pretty moderate.
For example, Matine's mother and sisters didn't wear headscarfs,
and he never did his prayers during the school day, always saving it for home.
The Matines and a handful of other local Muslim families,
would meet at Ramadan to break fast together.
Otherwise, from the outside at least,
it seems like it was all malls, McDonald's and Mortal Kombat.
Though, it does have to be said that his dad, Siddiqui Matine,
was quite the local character.
He was always seen wearing dark suits, floral ties,
and colorful pocket squares.
And he had some pretty extreme.
which he was definitely not shy about sharing.
He even hosted a YouTube series called The Duran Jerger Show.
I feel like your dad having a YouTube show in the late...
What were we talking in the 2000s?
Yeah, it must have been.
I don't know when his dad starts this, but yeah, like sometime maybe in the late 90s, early
2000s possibly.
When was YouTube started?
I actually don't know.
I mean, I feel like there was a real section of history we've all forgotten where podcasts
were for nerdy tech bros and nerdy tech bros only.
That's how I heard about the podcast, because my dad told me.
Like your dad.
My dad was like, have you heard a podcast?
I was like, what the fuck?
Love the guy.
It's a podcast.
So yeah, his dad has got a YouTube channel.
He's a very early adopter into this world.
And yeah, his show is called The Duran Jerga Show, which basically is the Durand Line
is a land border between Pakistan and Afghanistan.
That remains very much a sort of.
of extreme tension between the two nations.
So yes, immediately you can tell it's a political show.
That's what he's yelling about.
And Matine Sr. also appeared on a satellite TV channel
aimed at the Afghan community in the US.
Sometimes he would even appear in military fatigues
and sometimes he would even introduce himself
as the president of Afghanistan,
which he most certainly was not.
He was just an Afghan man living in port.
St. Lucy. Siddiqui considered himself to be a pretty influential commentator on Afghan politics,
a voice that was trusted throughout the Afghan community across the US and the Middle East.
How true that is, is hard to know. But in amongst his ramblings about the Pakistani and Afghani
governments, Matine Sr. made one thing very clear. He bloody loved the Afghan Taliban, calling them
warrior brothers.
And that is the same Afghani Taliban
that now runs the country
and has forced women to be covered
from head to toe not to speak in public
and in latest news, as of last year,
they also have to wear an eye patch
over one eye.
Because, quote, why do women need more than one eye?
It's a bit confusing though
because he seems to have a lot of like pretty strong
ideas about this kind of stuff
and he talks about it on his podcast,
sorry, not podcast, YouTube series.
Close enough.
But it is interesting.
interesting that Siddiqui didn't enforce veiling on his own wife and daughters. Remember, he's got
three daughters and a wife who don't even wear headscarves. So why that is, I don't know. But a lot of
things about a lot of people in this story are quite confusing. I was reading this the other day.
I can't remember the word for it, but there's a word, like, I suppose the Christian equivalent
would be a sacrament, I guess, I don't know. You're allowed to hide in order to, like, conceal
the fact that you are a Muslim in a hostile environment, which is one of the places where Islam
and Christianity are really opposed because Christians are encouraged never to lie and always
to be proud, never to hide. And that's a very high value thing that a person can do. And it's never
really encouraged to pretend to be something you're not. But there are elements of Islam where you can.
So I wonder whether that's what he would have argued.
Maybe. I think maybe what you're talking about is Tikia.
That's it. But my understanding of it is it's not necessarily that you hide,
but that you dampen down your intensity, religious intensity,
and even it's permissible to lie or to do whatever in order to survive in a hostile environment
or until, you know, that becomes part of the Great Caliphate.
That's what I've understood of it. So yeah, that does make sense.
Maybe he's like, it's better that we assimilate at least outwardly.
Though how much that actually happens is a bit of.
a question mark. But yeah, a lot of like, a lot of weird things going on. But I can see what you
mean. Maybe he's just like, we don't need to draw more attention to ourselves here. So let's just
not do that, possibly. Anyway, we'll come back to Sadiq Mutein and his influence over his son
Omar later. But for now, let's take a look at Omar Mottin's school years. And you'll be
unsurprised to hear that they weren't great, not the best. Matine was pretty overweight and he
He got a reputation as a bit of a pushover.
Sometimes the whole school bus would gang up on him,
so he wouldn't get a seat.
It was a lonely few years for young Wittine,
but then he started to push back.
And soon he reinvented himself totally
as a pretty serious school bully,
often targeting girls in particular.
His father, who dropped Omar off every morning,
was dismissive, regularly.
brushing off complaints about his son.
In fact,
Sadiq Mantine even drew a few complaints himself
about his disrespectful attitude
toward female teachers.
What a shocker.
Omar Mantine was eventually expelled
after a fight with another student,
which was so bad
that he was actually also charged with battery.
But he wasn't prosecuted.
Instead, Oman Mateen,
was sent to the Spectrum Alternative School in Stewart, Florida,
an institution for students with behavioral issues.
He was only there for a few months,
but he certainly left an impression.
Is it called Spectrum on purpose?
I mean, I did think that as I read that out loud.
Spectrum and alternative.
Good one.
And yeah, it's not going to get better for him here
because Omar Mateen's time as Spectrum
just so happened to coincide with the September 11th attacks.
And the morning of the attacks,
the teacher at Spectrum actually wheeled a TV into the classroom
so that the students could watch the horrifying news.
And a former classmate remembers looking over at Mateen
and having to do a double take
because Omar Matine was smiling.
And this student remembers thinking,
I was almost surreal how happy he was about what had happened to us.
And he didn't stop there.
After the second plane hit, Omar stood up and said that Osama Bin Laden was his uncle,
and had taught him how to shoot AK-47s.
The class didn't even know Bin Laden's name yet, but the implication was obvious.
Witnesses to this incident said that the whole room grew furious and they wanted to hurt him.
And just before they could, the teacher grabbed Matine and threw him out of class.
Omar's father came to pick him up.
Sadiq Matin silently strode towards the school,
and when he got to Omar, he slapped him hard across the face in front of everyone.
Probably not that his father was angry about what Matine has said.
It's much more likely he was just annoyed at his son for embarrassing him
and getting kicked out of yet another school.
But what does this all tell us about Omar Mateen himself?
I think this whole, like, laughing when September 11th is happening and, you know, all of that stuff,
I think goes beyond a bit of, like, teenage edge laudery.
His pleasure at the September 11th attack on innocent U.S. civilians
and the trauma that that was obviously, even at that time in the immediate moment,
before anybody even realized exactly what was happening,
had inflicted on the entire country,
a country of which he is also a citizen, born and raised,
speaks deeply to a radicalized individual.
Mateen clearly lacks any sense of loyalty to his own nation,
any sense of belonging or integration,
not to mention basic human empathy.
And we're seeing this already play out,
this like radicalisation with Mateen,
whilst he's still at school.
long before he could have been pulled in by IS's online radicalization propaganda.
I mean, maybe.
Maybe he was already on there.
But, you know, at this point when he's here, he's in his like teens.
If he was born in 1986, he's three years older than me.
I don't know.
Like how much acts, maybe he did because he was quite a lonely kid.
Maybe he was on the internet a lot.
Maybe the radicalization started early.
It's hard to know exactly where it was all coming from.
Was it online at this stage?
Was it coming from his dad?
I don't know.
But what we do know is from the data that whether his dad had some crazy views or not,
he's definitely trying to at least like be chill in front of people in the US.
The data does show that second generation and third generation radicalization seems to be far more prevalent.
So it would match with Omar Matin, potentially being even more radical than his father.
But who knows?
Again, what we do know is that Omar's childhood was defined by anger, both inside and outside his home.
After high school, he moved into a two-bed condo in Fort Pierce, Florida.
It was one of several owned by his family, and so they are clearly doing very well for themselves.
He did various service jobs, Chick-fil-A, Wargreens, Hollister, Gold's Gym,
and he did not live a particularly pious Muslim life either.
He partied, drinking and taking drugs, often to excess.
Sometimes he'd get completely out of control, starting fights and blacking out.
And I think this kind of sums up Omar Mateen quite well.
He very much picks and chooses the parts that he wants to go along with.
And as we'll see, he's very confused about which groups he wants to affiliate himself with,
whether it's ISIS or Al-Qaeda or the Taliban or, you know, Hezbollah.
Like, he's all over the place.
Does that mean that it's not important the things he's taking from these groups?
No.
But again, here you're seeing that he's not living a particularly religious life in terms of like abstaining from very, very haram things.
He's like, yeah, sick.
But he still also feels very strongly and fervently about the religion and about his lack of identity and integration into the US.
So, I don't know.
He's just not a very deep thinking person.
But what he is thinking is still important to our story.
Oh yeah, totally.
I think it's all about feeling like an outsider.
But he did pick and choose because he partied, he drank, he took drugs, often to excess.
And sometimes he would get completely out of control, starting fights and blacking out.
And it was around this time that Mateen started seriously hitting the gym, just like he had in the plane.
he decided that throwing his weight around was the answer to all of his problems.
And to turn that considerable weight into muscle, he had a little help from mystery powders and potions that he would order online.
He bulked up so dramatically in so little time that he had noticeable stretch marks on his biceps.
And then Matine made a slightly predictable next step.
He decided that he wanted to become a police officer.
And we see this consistently enough with killers.
They're drawn to positions of power and authority.
And if there's a uniform, even better.
It screams of a man lacking any sort of power and control in his own life.
And I guess it's unsurprising, given his seemingly domineering father who will slap him in the face,
even as a teenager in front of a classroom full of other kids,
and also his struggles to make friends.
And also,
So, Matine's likely issues around his own sexual identity.
First off, Matine got an associate's degree in criminal justice technology from Indian River State College in 2006.
And then he started police training.
Socially, his time at the police academy wasn't massively different to his school years.
He was jumpy, aggressive, and his behaviour only got stranger and stranger.
In spring 2007, the class got together for a barbecue.
you. Omar started to get huffy, saying they couldn't eat anything off the grill because he was
allergic to pork. They asked him if it was anything to do with being a Muslim, because that would
be fine if that was the case. But Matine completely flew off the handle, screamed at them and then
stormed off. And then a few weeks later, just before he was due to graduate, Matine went up to a
classmate and asked whether they'd report him if you brought a gun to campus. Obviously, the
classmate reported him for even suggesting that, and Matine was kicked out again of the academy.
But also again, Omar Matine was not charged. He was, however, thankfully, judged to be far too
volatile for the police. And I'm sure that deep down, this hit Matine hard. It's just one more reject
which likely fueled his rage. But soon, Matine went into private security, and in 2007 he joined
G4S, a huge private company providing hired muscle in 110 countries. Matine became a licensed security
guard and worked in all sorts of locations from prisons to golf courses, and he worked at G4S right
up until he was shot down at Pulse on the 12th of June 2016, which is remarkable. It's another part of
this story that does sort of sway or skew from the usual, because when people are spiraling like
that to the point that they are like, I'm going to go carry out a mass killing, a terror attack,
they're usually not in employment anymore. So it's very interesting that he was still working
up until the day he did this. Very unusual. And maybe things were starting to look up a little
after he joins G4S, because a few years after landing this job,
Matine married his first wife, Satorra Yusefi.
Yusefi had moved to the US from her native Uzbekistan when she was 11.
She grew up in New Jersey and became a real estate agent.
She met Omar Matine online and very quickly moved to Florida to be with him.
But, sadly, Yusufi soon discovered that Omar Mateen was an unpredictable whirlwind of violence.
He would regularly slap Yusufi and drag her around by her hair.
One day, after he strangled her, she finally called the police.
Omar Mateen wasn't charged.
Yusufi later told the Washington Post this.
He was not a stable person.
He would just come home and start beating me up because the laundry wasn't finished or something like that.
And unsurprisingly, and thankfully, the pair divorced after just nine months.
Matine's second wife is a bit more of a mystery
and we'll return to her later on
for now we're just going to tell you a little bit
her name was Nozahi Salman
she was a Palestinian-American
raised in California
they met online in 2011
on a dating site
called Arab Lounge
I guess it's no different to J-date really
it just seems a bit weird
sounds weird also
Matine's Afghani
He's not even an Arab.
He's like, I want an Arab lady,
so I'm going to look in an Arab lounge.
The first time Matine met Salman
was when he flew to California with his whole family in tow.
Presumably, they were desperate to marry off their disaster of a son.
And it worked,
because before they even flew home,
the couple were engaged.
And they tied the knot just three months after his divorce
to Satoria Yusufi was final.
And his second wife Salman was stricter and more reserved.
She wore a hijab and once she moved to Fort Pierce,
she didn't venture outside the house much.
And then a few years later, she gave birth to their son.
Like we said, we'll come back to Nor Salman later
when we get to her own trial after the shooting.
But this is the point in Matine's life
that we see a very sharp increase in his religious interest.
His first wife said that during their marriage,
Matine's focus was a lot less on the Quran and a lot more on kettlebells.
The same goes for the mosque that he occasionally attended,
the Islamic centre of Fort Pierce.
When he did go, he allegedly kept to himself.
Though if there was any radicalisation going on in that mosque,
they probably wouldn't mention it.
But we do also have to say that just because people are like,
there was nothing going on,
Matine was growing up alongside his dad's very intense political rants.
And as we saw when September 11th happened,
and he would have still been just a mid-teenager at that point in his mid-teens?
He certainly was very willing, very open about laughing at it, about mocking it.
It didn't seem like even at that point in his mid-teens that he classified himself as American.
In any case, it's not clear what sparked.
it. But one anonymous friend has said that Matine suddenly got a lot more intense after his divorce.
And it was also during this time that he made two separate pilgrimages to Mecca.
And it wasn't long before his colleagues at G4S noticed it in the way Matine spoke as well.
He'd bulked up as much as he humanly could and was growing a lot more aggressive and confrontational by the day.
Whether there was any steroid abuse and maybe that accounts for his like increased aggression and whatnot, I wouldn't be surprised.
I mean, it does seem quite likely.
Hmm.
Customers that met him as a security guard reported his creepy behavior, like taking their IDs and then just staring at them wide-eyed and breathing heavily.
His colleagues reported him time and again for being violent and threatening.
But nothing happened, and he just kept getting worse.
Mateen's former co-worker, Daniel Gilroy, says this.
It was always about violence.
He was always on the edge, always hyper and agitated.
He would never have more than three or four sentences
without being derogatory about women or using slurs against black people, gay people and Jews.
So, yeah, very open, very open.
nothing being hidden here, nothing that screams of just like,
I'm not saying it doesn't scream with the fact that he knows it's wrong.
I think he does know that other people don't like the way he's behaving,
but he doesn't give too fucks.
It's like he enjoys making people feel uncomfortable.
The whole thing about taking the IDs off people and like staring them down
and like breathing heavily and saying all of these like slurs to people,
he doesn't not know that that is something people don't like.
He's doing it on purpose.
The question is why?
Is it something as fucked up as like he just gets rejected constantly by people?
And this is not making excuses for him or in any way sympathizing with him because fuck this guy.
But is it this thing of like, oh, I get rejected all the time anyway.
I'm just going to be a fucking dickhead.
Then at least that's why they're rejecting me rather than because of me just being nice and then I'm still getting rejected.
I don't know if I care that much about this guy to give a shit if that's what he was doing.
But I wonder if that explains.
because it's only one of two things.
It's either there is some sort of personality disorder or psychiatric or mental health
situation and that is why he is so openly saying such heinous things that make people
and doing such heinous things like saying shall I, you know, what if I brought a gun in to the academy?
Are you serious?
Like why would you say that?
It seems like he's either nuts or it is some sort of deep-seated way to just be like,
yeah, fucking hate me then.
And at least I know why you hate me.
I don't know. I don't know.
No, me either.
But it carries on.
And then one day, Matine started telling co-workers
that he was friendly with terrorists.
Matine said that he knew the Sarniv brothers,
the ones who had carried out the Boston Marathon bombings.
He said that he had family connections to al-Qaeda,
and he also said that he was a member of Hezbollah.
He once even told his colleagues that he'd like to, quote,
die a martyr's death.
And yes, look, it is worth mentioning that al-Qaeda is Sunni and Hezbollah Ashia.
Ugh.
People like make a big thing of this because Matine is claiming to be a member of both
or being related to one side and being a member of the other,
despite, of course, them being bitter enemies who are very much at war with each other.
And I don't know, people sort of use this to say that we shouldn't take what he's saying seriously.
I mean, he's doing exactly the same thing he did in high school.
Yeah.
Just saying the most outrageous thing he can think of.
I don't think it's actually anything to do with what he truly in his heart believes.
And I think it's an illustration of that rather than that we shouldn't take him seriously
or that he isn't terrifying or he isn't that he can just be ignored.
I don't think it's that at all.
No, because I personally, I do think it is what he believes in his heart.
I think he's very drawn to that ideology.
I think he's very, very...
But you can't be Sunni and Shia at the same time.
You can't. No, but he doesn't know what he's talking about.
He doesn't know what he's talking about.
But I think it's like people use it as a way, like him talking about the Sunni and Shia,
as a way to undermine his terrorism by saying, see, it's not really Islamist terror.
He doesn't even know what he's talking about.
One minute he's talking about Sunni, next minute he's talking about Shia.
To me, I'm like, who cares?
Who cares?
To me, it's like, why would it matter if he wasn't coherent in his murderous martyrdom beliefs?
I think the fact is that you see this pattern of behavior with him that he is very drawn to radical Islamist ideologies.
Jihad, death, talking about martyrdom, all that kind of stuff.
And given the fact that we know what he went on to do, it's obviously more than him just trying to freak out his colleagues or like be a bit edgy.
Like I just think, I think he doesn't know what he's talking about, but so what if he's not an Islamic scholar?
He's just, he's still drawn to it.
He is still attracted to it.
Just because he doesn't know what he's talking about doesn't mean that he doesn't believe,
that he doesn't believe in the things that he's saying.
And I'm not really that interested in people being like,
oh, well, this comes from this type of Islam and this comes from that.
He is jumbling it all together into whatever, but at the core of it,
he believes in some fundamentalist, Islamist, jihadist version of whatever he wants
to justify the things that he wants to do.
And it's also in there.
It's in there. It's telling him, you know, die a martyr's death. And so it's giving him the green light.
Thankfully, his colleagues did the right thing. And they reported, Matine.
And that report was sent straight to the FBI.
And the FBI investigated Omar Mateen for 10 months, beginning in March 2013.
In that year, they interviewed him twice, at least.
length. But Matine brushed it all off, insisting that he'd only said those things because his
co-workers teased him about being Muslim. As well as those two interviews, the FBI also recorded
Mateen's calls and even sent confidential informants to gauge whether he had been radicalised. He was
followed and records were scoured for any connection to known terrorists. And despite his big talk,
his many claims, those searches came up with absolutely zilch.
And so authorities clearly disregarded him as a real threat,
because, as Hannah said, they couldn't find a connection between Omar Mateen
and radical Islamist terrorism,
which honestly just shows,
and I'll say, okay, fine, this was 10 years ago,
but it really does show, that decision shows their total lack of understanding
as to the evolving nature of terrorism.
And maybe, you know, this is all like well and good to say in hindsight.
But we have to look in hindsight.
We have to look back and analyze what was happening
because that's exactly what was happening at this time.
Just because Omar Martin had not been affiliated with the likes of IS or Al-Qaeda,
so what?
Post 9-11, the landscape of terrorism,
particularly in the West, totally changed.
People weren't running off in person to training camps in Pakistan anymore to learn how to build a bomb and blow themselves up.
It all went online.
We all saw what was happening when we did the episode on the Beth North Green Girls who ran away to Syria.
It all turned into propaganda that was being pummeled online.
They weren't even necessarily like, here's a training video on how to make a bomb.
They were like, we haven't got time for that shit.
Grab a fucking car, grab a truck, grab a knife, just go fucking mental.
do some sort of crazy berserk attack. And there you go. Bingo and die. And then you've died a martyr's
death and you'll go straight to paradise. This was what was happening. And it's at this point that we
saw after 9-11 the rise of the leaderless jihad. And we'll come back to it later in this episode
because I think it's a very important and interesting concept in how things changed after 9-11.
And why it's so shocking that the FBI were like, oh, we can't find any connections.
between him and somebody, you know, out in Afghanistan, therefore he's not a threat?
I don't think that's how they would police the situation now, but it is so heartbreaking.
So the FBI cleared Mateen, but a year later in 2014, he was questioned again for the third time.
This time, it came after Monma Mohammed Abu Salah became the first American to carry out a suicide
bombing in Syria. Abusala, like Matine, had been based in Florida, and they had both even attended
the same college. And the FBI discovered that Abu Salah had lived less than a mile away from
Mateen. But again, the investigation found that any contact had been minimal. So, again, the FBI
Bureau in Tampa, Florida concluded that Omer Mateen posed no threat.
In fact, not only was there no terrorist link, there was very little evidence of criminal wrongdoing at all.
But, he might be thinking, what about his big fight at school?
And the time he strangled his wife?
And what about when he was kicked out of the police academy?
Well, he was never convicted for any of it.
Which is exactly why Matine was able to get himself a Florida license to carry concealed weapons.
And in May 2016, Omar Mateen legally bought a handgun, an AR-15 assault rifle and plenty of ammunition.
Around the same time, Matine's father, Sadiq, remembers an incident as they were walking down the shoreline in downtown Miami.
Sadiq says he saw two men kissing each other in front of his wife and kid and he got very angry.
They were kissing each other and touching each other,
and Omar said,
Look at that.
In front of my son, they're doing that.
Two weeks later, Mertin was dead,
and he'd taken almost 50 gay men with him.
So, as much as I would certainly like to not do this,
we do have to go back to Pulse,
just after 2 a.m. on Saturday the 12th of June 2016.
After getting into the building,
most people stepped directly out
onto the club's main dance floor.
At the centre hung a huge giant glitter ball,
scattering reflected light across the dancing crowd.
On one end of the room
were the doors out to the fenced-in patio.
And on the other side was a separate dance floor,
a cocktail lounge known as the Adonis room,
with a stage for go-go dancers and drug performers.
And at the back of the building,
through the Adonis room,
were the bathrooms.
On that Saturday night, by 2 a.m., the night was starting to wind down.
One eyewitness later said, everyone was drinking their last sip.
But it's a big club, and that last sip can be the longest of the night.
There were still 300 people inside at that time.
Videos posted on social media show blist-out clubgoers,
chatting to friends and dancing away.
and in the background, over the booming music,
there's a sort of crackling sound.
Some thought it was firecrackers,
or just some heavy bass from the next room.
But they were wrong.
It was an assault rifle,
and dozens of people were already dead.
Oma Martine had entered through the front door of Pulse
with his AR-15-type rifle and a handgun.
He opened fire with the rifle and sprayed bullets at the crowd for 15 uninterrupted seconds.
And I think you think 15 seconds, that's not long, but if you actually just counted 15 seconds
and thought of somebody firing a fucking rifle into a crowd of people for that long, my God.
Yeah.
Bullets ripped through legs, arms and backs and bodies slump to the ground.
Before long, the music stopped, leaving the building, filled with sounds of panic, punctuated by more deafening gunfire.
Matine fired 200 rounds in less than five minutes.
Jackie Smith, a patron who saw two friends, shot in front of her, said, nobody stood a chance.
An off-duty police officer who was working at Pulse that night exchanged gunfire with Mateen near the entrance.
While he was distracted, many rushed for the exits.
As well as the front door, there was an emergency exit by the bathrooms, plus doors out to the patio.
The patio was enclosed by a tall fence, but, after an employee kicked a hole through it, people poured out into the street.
Those in the bathrooms crammed themselves into stalls, others hid in dressing rooms or DJ booths.
When officers arrived at 204 a.m., another shootout ensued.
Mateen was forced back into the bathrooms.
Social media was flooded with posts of people pleading for help.
At 209 a.m., the Pulse Nightclub's Facebook account posted the chilling words.
Everybody get out of Pulse and keep running.
A man named Eddie started texting his mother at 206am.
And here are the text messages, as well.
reported by the Washington Post.
Mommy, I love you.
In club, they're shooting.
He's coming. I'm going to die.
His mother replied and asked
whether people were hurt.
And he replied, lots,
yes.
After 45 minutes of increasingly
terrified messages,
Eddie's text suddenly stopped.
His mother never saw him alive again.
In the bathrooms,
Matine shot those who found in the stalls.
but he took six hostages captive,
telling them not to try and run
because he also had snipers outside.
And once everyone was still,
Matine's first call to 911 was made at 2.35 a.m.
He was calm.
He started off in Arabic, saying a prayer to Allah.
Then he carried on in English.
I want to let you know.
I'm in Orlando.
and I did the shooting.
I pledged allegiance to Abu Baku al-Baghdadi of the Islamic State.
If you couldn't make that out, he's pledging allegiance to the Islamic State
and specifically its leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.
He went on to say that the shooting was triggered by the US killing
of the last head of IS in Iraq the previous month,
a militant jihadist named Abu Bakradi.
were he. Then, Matine hung up, but 13 minutes later, he called no more one again. And this call
was answered by police negotiators. Matine told them, you have to tell America to stop bombing Syria
and Iraq. They're killing a lot of innocent people. What am I to do when my people are getting
killed over there? His tone in these calls is infuriating. It's condescending, he's petulant,
and absolutely clueless.
At one point he calls the police negotiator a homeboy.
But obviously they had to take these threats seriously,
especially because he told police that he had explosives primed in a vehicle nearby,
which he would set off if they did anything stupid.
He said that he had a vest on, like the one they used in France.
Presumably he's talking about the Batta clan there.
that had rocked the world the year before.
He said that there would be more similar attacks over the next few days.
And he told the hostages that he would be putting explosive vests on four of them
and sending them to the four corners of the club.
None of it was true, but no one could take any chances.
Yeah, and I think, again, just the fact that he is calling the police,
He is like saying all this stuff.
He's not just gone in there, shot a bunch of people and then killed himself or blown himself up or anything.
He's demanding attention.
He's demanding control.
He's lying to them, telling them, I've got snipers, I've got an explosive vehicle outside.
I've got a explosive vest on.
Like you said, none of that's true.
It's all bullshit.
But he is getting off so much on controlling the police.
I'm sure this also comes back to the fact that he was rejected from the police.
He's like, fuck you, you're not the authority.
I'm going to laud it over you.
This is his moment.
I'm sure he knows at the end of this he is going to die, either by suicide by cop or he will kill himself.
But he is like, I'm going to enjoy and milk every fucking moment of this night before that happens.
It's absolutely what it feels like. He's not just in and out, one and done.
No, and I think I'd take him pretty seriously.
Yeah. So while he's speaking, while he's taking all this time out of his busy night to speak to 9-1-1,
Police work to secure the building
and get as many people out of there as they could.
They helped some people escape through an air-condition event
in a dressing room.
Then the police started to prepare explosives of their own
to breach the external wall of the bathroom.
An armoured vehicle and more crisis negotiators arrived
and at 5am, three long hours
after Mateen first burst through the door of Pulse,
a SWAT team stormed the building.
Explosives were detonated on the rear wall between the bathrooms.
Dozens more people flooded out, but at first, there was no sign of a gunman.
They blew more holes in the real wall.
And suddenly, at 5.14 a.m., an officer saw him, just 10 feet away.
The sound of gunfire burst through the night one last time.
And within a minute, Omar Mateen was dead.
said. 49 people had been killed and 58 more had been wounded. All of this leaves us with a few
gaping holes in the centre of this story. Firstly, the nature of Omanateen's relationship with the Islamic
state. Was this really an attack on Western liberal values from a death cult on the other side of the
world? Well, yes and no. U.S. officials did not.
the IS had had any involvement in the Pulse massacre,
as no official links were officially discovered
between the 29-year-old US citizen
and any foreign organizations.
So they labelled Mateen a lone wolf,
a term that I absolutely despise.
Firstly, for the very obvious,
glamorous, maverick connotations to that phrase,
but also because when it comes to terror attacks like this,
it's deeply misleading.
It suggests that Mateen acted in some sort of silo,
like he came up with his own ideology,
he pulled it out of nowhere,
and he just went on a rampage killing people.
He is directly referencing terrorist organizations.
So why would he be a lone wolf?
And yes, while they admitted that, of course,
he had been radicalized by IS propaganda
and radical Islamist material, most likely online,
they held fast to the notion that IS hadn't orchestrated the whole thing.
Which, okay.
I understand why they are so insistent to get this point across.
It's to avoid scaring the public at large.
Nobody needs people thinking that they are potentially under siege from a foreign terror group.
And of course it's also so that intelligence services can reasonably explain how they didn't have O'M Armitine on their radar.
But honestly, the reality of the situation is actually much.
more terrifying than that. A US-born man was so capable of being seduced by radical Islamist
propaganda and was willing to kill and die for this ideology. It doesn't matter whether you
think that ideology is valid or not. No. And what does it matter if a specific Islamic State
recruiter spoke to Mateen or not.
Wasn't even, like we said, how IS even operated anymore by 2016.
What we're seeing here is a phenomenon that has exploded across the world since September 11th,
the rise of the leaderless jihad.
A term coined by an author named Mark Sageman in his book, Leaderless Jihad.
So does it matter that Matine had zero contacts in the Middle East?
Does it matter that while Matim was talking to his negotiators,
he oscillated between wildly contradictory and half-remembered philosophies?
Does it matter that he claimed allegiance to Islamist groups
that were literally at war with each other?
Does it make him any less of an Islamist terrorist?
I don't think so.
No.
Before the night of the 12th of June 2016,
Omar Mateen posted the following message to Facebook.
America and Russia stop bombing the Islamic State.
I pledge my allegiance to Abu Bakr al-Baghar al-Baghdadi.
May Allah accept me.
The real Muslims will never accept the filthy ways of the West.
You kill innocent women and children by doing US airstrikes.
Now taste the Islamic State vengeance.
And like we said, in his 911 call,
he directly claimed allegiance to IS too.
After the attack, IS claimed responsibility.
Using an encrypted phone app,
IS later sent out a statement saying that the attack was carried out by an Islamic State fighter.
That's a quote.
Many IS sympathizers changed their profile pictures on Twitter to Matine's image.
IS even posted videos of children celebrating the attack.
Yeah, it totally makes sense.
They didn't have to call him and groomed him.
him and tell him what to do. What did he fucking do? He just bought a gun. He didn't even build a bomb.
He just bought a gun and went into a club and shot a bunch of people. Of course IAS will claim it.
Why would they not claim it? This is it. It's basically like anyone, anyone. It's crowdsourcing terrorism.
It's open source terrorism. It's like, here's the crazy shit we fucking believe.
Whoever wants to be a part of it can be a part of it. Just, you know, get whatever weapon you can.
go create some fucking chaos, kill some fucking infidels, and then you can become an Islamic State
fighter. So when they call Matine an Islamic State fighter, it is not incongruent because people are like,
well, why are they calling him that when they never recruited him? They did fucking recruit him
by just putting out their ideology into the world. That's all it takes. That's all that matters.
So in any way that matters, he was an Islamic State fighter, in his mind, in his heart, in any other part of his body,
And in their minds, he is an Islamic State Fighter.
And so, he is an Islamic State fighter and therefore this is Islamist terrorism.
Like, I don't understand why there's so much back and forth about this on the internet,
about whether it really was.
I think the discourse has changed now, now that we're in 2026,
but at the time, most definitely.
I just don't know why people were talking themselves round and round in circles about this whole thing.
And look, I think we should talk about what he said,
about saying Russia and the US stop bombing Syria and Iraq stop bombing my people.
people. Those are the words that he uses. And you often see this as a reason trotted out by terrorists to
justify their violence, or, of course, also by terrorist sympathizers in the West, making excuses for them,
saying, well, these terrorist attacks wouldn't happen, wouldn't keep happening in the West if we didn't
have, you know, certain foreign policies that were taking place in the Middle East and basically saying
it's all as a result of that and these people basically bottom line saying they bear no
responsibility for their actions. But I do have to wonder about it.
that because it is true that Muslims are actually worldwide the biggest victims of radical Islamist
violence because terror attacks like this don't just happen in the West, they also happen
in the Islamic world. And therefore Muslims, we all have to agree because it's factually true.
They are the biggest victims if you're talking by sheer numbers of radical Islamist violence.
So if that's the case, then how can the Western death toll be to do purely with foreign intervention?
Because the people who are dying and getting blown up in Muslim countries,
they're not partaking in aggressive foreign policy against other Muslims or against the Middle East or the Islamic world.
So why are they being blown up?
So why would it be to just-to-do with Western foreign policy?
It doesn't make sense.
It doesn't add up.
You can't have both.
I think the phrase that he says, quote, real Muslims will never accept the filthy ways of the West.
And obviously, do I even have to caveat it by saying, not all Muslims think this, but he is saying that.
He believes that.
And he is saying they will never accept the way of the West.
And I think that is far more telling as to his real motivation.
And even the phrase that he uses, stop bombing my people in Iraq and Syria.
He's not even Iraqi or Syrian, but he's speaking to this sort of global Muslim brotherhood,
sisterhood, the great Ummah, the great belief that only all other Muslims are connected to each other
and wherever you live, it's not really your homeland, you're kind of just waiting for the whole
world to become this sort of Islamic caliphate. Again, obviously not all Muslims, but that is what he
believes. That is what he is saying. And so he identifies much more of a man of Afghani heritage who was
born and raised in New York, he identifies more with Syrians and Iraqis who are living on the other
side of the world more than he does with his fellow Americans because he was laughing when September
11th happened. It shows this total breakdown in his identity and his ability to integrate into the
society in which he lived or his desire to. His allegiances were completely somewhere else,
as were his ideologies. And so I think what's actually going on here is a lot more poisonous and a lot more
terrifying than if he had been contacted by an IS recruiter. The reason that the FBI didn't find a
direct connection between IS and Mateen was because there was none to be found. But, and this is very
important, the holy month of Ramadan had started just the week before the pulse attack. And in a
statement, IS spokesman Abu Mohammed Aladani had said the following, again on social media again for
everyone to see. The smallest action you do in the heart of their land is dearer to
than the largest action by us and more effective and more damaging to them.
Obviously, it's very clear who them are and who us are.
They're talking about the West.
And then this guy made it crystal clear.
The IS supporters worldwide could and should carry out acts of terror in the group's name.
He said, quote, do not ask anyone's permission.
So they're not waiting around for an IS recruit.
to slip into the fucking DMs and be like,
hey bro, this is how you build a fucking bomb.
It doesn't matter.
He even suggested that they didn't need to buy weapons.
They could use rocks, knives or cars to kill the infidels.
A leaderless jihad.
And this is absolutely a key part of IS protocol.
Any angry would-be terrorist anywhere in the world
can carry out an act of terror, state the oath.
and bigo you are an IS freedom fighter
and your life finally has meaning
and that's why it's so scary
imagine it is so much less scary
if we think there's just all these secret sleeper cells
like how many can there really be
the police could definitely track them
they just had to infiltrate a few gangs
and they you know I'm not saying it would be easy
but it would be easier than this situation
like if everyone was just sitting around
waiting from instructions from like
some leader out in the middle of nowhere.
This is so much worse.
You can't read into people's minds.
You don't know what they're thinking.
Any person who just finds this narrative alluring
can just get a car and carry out an attack.
And that's why we've seen the frequency of those kind of attacks
amplified.
And that's why it's so much scarier
than what they were trying to tell the public
not to worry about.
Don't worry, don't worry.
There was no IS recruiter.
I'm like, that would be better.
then what is actually happening?
What you gain by being stamped an IS freedom fighter is a promise of purpose.
Lionization, martyrdom and a hero's death, of course,
comes with those 72 virgins waiting to perform your every filthy desire in paradise.
It catapults people like Oma Mateen from loner with axe to grind
into Crusader on the front lines of a global war.
And that's the absolute definition of what terrorism is.
Spreading the dark shadow of IS across the world.
IS spews out propaganda all over the internet, poisoning people against its enemies.
And they do this in the hope of catching a stray loser who might actually do their bidding.
This is an especially cushy deal for IS because it poses no risk.
to their actual organization.
They don't need to infiltrate anything
or lose any actual members
or like alert the FBI
to have a terrorist attack attributed to them.
It's pretty much a win-win.
Yeah, totally, totally.
It's so much lighter on the like lift.
You're not having to like speak to loads of people,
manage all these people.
Just put it out there, like this horrible mind virus
and then wait for people to fall into it.
And then when they carry out an attack, claim it as your own.
It's so genius in the most horrific way possible.
And the truly terrifying thing is that it's working.
In the few years before Pulse, there were three very similar instances.
Just seven months before the Pulse nightclub shooting,
two men killed 14 people in San Bernardino, California.
Just before they pledged allegiance to, you guessed it, IS,
on again, you guessed it, Facebook.
In 2015, a gunman opened fire on a cartoon exhibit in Texas,
which featured images of everybody's favorite prophet, Mr. Muhammad.
And again, this shooter pledged allegiance to IS on Twitter.
In 2014, a man opened fire at a cafe in Sydney.
In all three cases, they were homegrown, violent extremists who had been radicalized online.
And as far as anyone knows, they had no direct link to any terrorist
cell or network.
The Sydney shooter, Haron Monis, was schizophrenic,
and before claiming allegiance to IS,
he also worked as a clairvoyant,
and was also a convicted sex offender.
The Australian press wrote that the Islamic State
had successfully sent one of its agents
into the heart of Australia's biggest cities,
but he had no idea what he was fighting for.
In fact, when he turned up, he brought the wrong flag.
And again, might seem like,
of course, that's hilarious, it's fucking.
looking so stupid, like what a stupid man. And what a mentally ill man, obviously he must have been
dealing with what he was dealing with. But like, it doesn't matter that these people don't know
exactly what they're doing it for. The fact is they're being lured in by such despicable
ideologies and then carrying out heinous attacks in their name. It's all fake anyway. So who cares?
The fact is they believe it. And as for Matine, he was an unremarkable man with a history of
violence who wanted an outlet for his considerable anger.
And given his father's beliefs, Mityin was absolutely primed for online radicalisation by
fundamental Islamist doctrine, just as the perpetrators in the other attacks we just listed
were.
But I grant you that Métin's motive may have added a personal element, because it's possible
that the real battle Moutin was fighting was the one inside himself, because you
June 12th, 2016 was not the first time Omar Mateen had stepped foot inside Pulse.
And on the face of it, his targeting of a gay club does seem like it fits like the ISMO.
After all, the Islamic State believes homosexuality to be evil and deserving of punishment by death.
They have even posted videos, in which men they have identified as being homosexuals are thrown off tall buildings.
But when it comes to large-scale attacks,
IS have been clear that there are no specific targets.
Charlie Winter and Hararo J. Ingram write in the Atlantic,
when it comes to waging war against the Crusader enemy,
doesn't really matter to the organisation if the victim is gay or straight.
If anything, that the majority of the dead were gay,
was for ISIS a distraction.
And like maybe, maybe.
I don't know if I totally buy this.
I get what they're saying because there's absolutely been statements from my ass saying
it does not matter who the victims are.
Even if you kill other Muslims, it doesn't matter.
If you're killing infidels, that's the main thing.
If you accidentally kill a few Muslims and that, it doesn't matter
because they'll go to paradise anyway if they were true believers.
So don't worry.
It doesn't really matter.
Don't get hung up on who the victims are.
The main thing is that you are,
terror. You are just going mental and scaring people and killing people. That is the end goal.
But the reason why I do think there is again an evolution away from just thinking it doesn't matter
who the victims are, because if we look at the targets of terror attacks that we have seen
across the West in recent years, for example, take the batter clan, they went after people who were at a
gig partying, then look at something like the Manchester Arena bombing in the UK. They targeted little
girls who are again dancing at an Ariana Grande concert. And then look at all of the Christmas markets
across Europe that have been attacked over the years to the point that now some places just don't
even do it anymore because it's not worth it because they're scared a car is going to ram into the people
that are there. It does feel like these killers are targeting events that symbolize Western freedoms.
Does it not? People drinking, partying, little girls going out, dancing, Christmas markets. I accept.
the premise that they don't really care who they kill.
But I don't think it's unsymbolic, like the situations that they're targeting.
No, I don't think so.
There is one theory that we're going to spend a bit more time on,
that Mateen himself was gay.
After the Pulse Attack, the nightclub's regular patrons were interviewed.
I met him one time at the bar.
He was talking to me about his ex-wife.
He used to come in the bar about on the weekend sometimes he would be there.
Sometimes he would miss a couple weeks and then be in again.
He was regular.
We consider that regular.
Everybody knew his name.
Omar.
Yeah.
He was trying to pick up people.
Men.
He's a homosexual and he was trying to pick up men.
He would walk up to them and then he would maybe put his arm around
or something and maybe try to get him to dance a little bit or something and then go over and buy a drink or something.
That's what people do at Gaymars. You know, that's what we do.
When you saw his picture, what went through your mind when you saw his picture?
It was North. We just went, oh, like, yeah, that makes sense.
There, that's Omar.
The Orlando Sentinel spoke to four different Pulse regulars, who said that they had personally seen Matine at the club, up to a dozen times.
going back years.
Several people have reported being contacted by Matine on gay dating apps,
like Jacked and Grindr.
One man has even come forward claiming that he had a sort of friends with benefits relationship with Omar Matine.
The man who has chosen to stay anonymous calls himself Miguel.
Miguel said that over two months they met at a hotel in Orlando between 15 and 20 times for sex.
And Miguel said,
I believe this is not terrorism,
saying that he thinks Matine intentionally targeted Latinos
in retaliation for being rejected by them.
Looking at Matine's history, I think it's more than that,
but I don't think it's an unimportant part of his motivation.
Through Matine's life,
person after person, comes up saying they either suspected
or just assumed that he was gay.
One classmate from his college days told the Washington
post that he would regularly visit gay bars with Mateen and a group of friends.
On one of these nights allegedly, Matine asked this friend if he was gay and then said,
well, if you were gay, you'd be my type.
Even Sitaura Yusufi, Matine's first wife, said that it's possible he had hidden feelings
about being gay.
Matine's father denies any suggestion of his son's homosexuality saying,
why, if he were gay, would he do?
this. Bit easy, that one. You give me that one for free, Mugger. Mottin spent his childhood
being bullied for being different. He spent his career violently firing back at any suggestion
of discrimination or mockery. And he was raised by a father who in public videos on YouTube
said things like, God himself will punish those involved in homosexuality. So it's not exactly
a stretch to imagine that Matine absorbed that hatred of homosexuality, and it's very possible
that if he started to see that in himself, he would just push it on down.
This self-hatred, combined with the religious teachings he grew up with, seemingly coalesced
into a man capable of murdering 49 people.
We also read an interview with a young gay Muslim man called Sohill Ahmed in the BBC, which felt very relevant.
Ahmed said this.
I would research all these Islamic verdicts on what you should do if you had homosexual feelings.
One thing would keep coming up again and again was that you actually needed to be more religious, worship more.
It sounded really paradoxical, but I actually became more radical in an attempt to cure myself of homosexuality.
Ahmed also remembers feeling that he himself was evil
or that his homosexuality was a punishment from God for something he had done.
He said it was an absolutely horrifying feeling
waking up every day with this voice in the back of your head
saying you're disgusting, you're evil.
It just increased my hatred for myself and other gay people.
Ahmed says he even considered staging a terrorist attack himself.
I don't think it's paradoxical
to become more religious because you believe you're evil.
I think that makes perfect sense.
Yeah, it does.
I guess maybe he means now in hindsight,
it feels paradoxical for him
to feel like going closer to the thing that's telling you
that what you're feeling is sick and wrong and evil.
But yeah, I think whether it's religion
or whether it's just society telling you
that what you're feeling is wrong and gross and sick,
I can absolutely understand why you would have that internalised homophobia.
It's the next step that comes with this particular ideology,
though that is then go blow some people up or go kill some people because of that
that seems to take it a step rather than is ideal.
But before we wrap this story up for good, let's look at the potential involvement of his
second wife, Nor Zahai Salman.
In the weeks after the shooting, she started to become the focus of various probing news reports.
They painted her as a quiet,
devout, uncooperative figure. Some alleged that she accompanied him on his trips to buy ammunition,
and even to scope out the nightclub itself. Many asked the question, could she have been
Matine's secret accomplice? And so could there still be some justice in court, despite Matine's
death? A few months later, Salman was arrested in Northern California, and
she was indicted. On two counts, obstruction of justice and providing material support to a terrorist
organisation. She faced a maximum sentence of life in prison. The FBI questioned Salman for more than
15 hours. And they did these interviews before she was formally accused, so not a single second of those
15 hours was actually recorded. She also had no lawyer present. Now when it came to the trial, the
prosecution pointed to a written confession from the day of the shooting. The confession was actually
written by an FBI agent, but it was signed by Salman. And the whole thing is written in the first
person, so from Salman's point of view. But again, it wasn't written by her. And it says that she and
Mateen cased both the Pulse Night Club and a local theme park in the weeks before the shooting.
It also said that Matine had asked her, how bad would it be, if she was.
a club got attacked. And the statement went on to say, again, from Salman's point of view,
I often worry that he was going to commit an act of violence or terrorism. I wish I had done
the right thing, but my fear held me back. You probably know what we're going to say next.
The defence's position was that this confession, written by an agent in those pressurised few
hours after the shooting occurred was coerced.
Salman says the authorities threatened that she'd never see her son again and that he would be
raised by Christians if she didn't sign it.
Her defence collected GPS and phone data and none of it indicated that Salmon was going
anywhere near the nightclub.
And it might not totally stun you to find out that Matine was brutally abusive to Salman
their very short marriage.
Just like with his first wife,
he beat, kicked and strangled her.
She was threatened with death and constantly raped.
Salmon was not allowed to work,
and Matine even monitored the food she ate.
All bank accounts and credit cards were taken out in his name only.
He also regularly cheated on her with other women,
and if you believe the stories, with men too.
But in March 2018,
a jury found Noor Zahi Salman not guilty.
They concluded that she was the victim of an abusive marriage to a monster.
And after two years in prison, she was finally reunited with her son.
And what Salman's testimony really exposes is probably a bit more systemic.
Researchers are well aware of the link between domestic violence and mass shootings.
That jump from domestic terrorists to public terrorist is not a big leap.
and there are some very clear laws related to domestic violence,
which are specifically meant to stop these men in their tracks.
One law bans convicted abuses from owning guns,
and non-fatal strangulation is a felony in Florida.
If these laws had been enforced properly,
Matine would have been in jail,
long before he ever walked into Pulse and murdered 49 people.
And at worst, he definitely would not have had access
to a semi-automatic weapon.
And there's one last revelation
that happened to come out of Nor Salman's trial,
this time to do with the shooter's father,
Sadiq Mutein.
It turned out that he'd worked with the FBI
as a confidential informant
for more than a decade
leading right up to the shooting.
And the FBI had recently launched
an investigation into him
after finding evidence
that he made money transfer,
to Turkey and Afghanistan in the months leading up to the shooting.
Unfortunately, we don't have much more information about this,
so it's just another strange footnote in a story that keeps changing.
And naturally, this information, and because we don't know much about his father's FBI business,
plus the fact that large chunks of Mateen's interviews that were publicly released
have been heavily redacted, has caused endless speculation,
with many wondering if he really did have IS links and the FBI
was just lying to cover up for its own mistakes.
Who knows?
As for the survivors, all of this fades into the background.
The terror of the night is never far away.
Patience Carter, who escaped the shooting and lost friends that night,
has said that the guilt of being alive is heavy.
For many, nightmares still linger today, ones where they're transported back there,
in a hail of gunfire between their screaming friends.
They report still sensing the smell of blood.
Some struggled to leave their own houses for years after the attack.
The first responders at the scene suffer extreme PTSD from the three and a half hours
that they spent inside the club that night.
And then there are, of course, the many survivors who are permanently disabled.
and we'll never walk again.
The Pulse Nightclub stood vacant and abandoned for nine years.
Its walls and surrounding fences becoming a memorial to those lost in 2016.
Banners were hung and 49 dried white roses were braided into the fence.
On the bullet-marked walls, messages of love and support were scrawled and spray-painted.
And just before it was knocked down last year, survivors, family members and journalists were allowed inside
for the first time since the shooting.
They were given the opportunity to walk around the space and take it in.
Most of the furniture had gone,
but that giant disco ball still hung from the ceiling.
There is only one way we can really end this story.
Omar Mateen was an angry, scared man.
Aggression was his only means of expression.
He thought that he would be seen as a brave freedom fighter in a holy war.
But no one.
Not even the Islamic State directly ordered him to commit the deadliest mass shooting that the US had ever seen.
Omar Mateen was a nobody.
And despite gouging his name into the history books, he will always be a nobody.
He wanted to scare people into thinking that they couldn't live the life they wanted to live.
An inscription on a parking lot barrier next to the memorial that now has.
stands on the site reads,
Never Stop Dancing.
So, if you want to, in your own way,
give a little fuck you to Omar Mateen tonight,
why not go out to a gay bar near you and dance the night away?
Because yeah, the day after this comes out on the 12th of June,
26, as we said at the start, will be the 10-year anniversary.
I can't believe it's been 10 years.
I remember when it happened and it was in the news,
it just felt unbelievable.
And at the time, like we said,
it was the deadliest smash shooting
in a very dubious record.
It was overtaken, I believe, the following year.
But, yeah, bad, bad stuff.
And that's it, guys, that's everything we've got for you on the Pulse.
Nightclub massacre.
Yeah.
Go out.
Drink 17 margaritas.
Have a great time.
That's what I'm going to do.
That's it.
Absolutely.
And yes, we will see you next time.
For maybe something a little bit less depressing.
I hope so.
But I have a horrible feeling.
Who knows?
That is.
I can't remember.
Goodbye.
