3-Year-Old-Boy Denied Medication at New Mexico Compound Where His Body Was Found, Prosecutors Say

Authored by time.com and submitted by LizardAscension
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(SANTA FE, N.M) — Prosecutors on Friday charged the father and stepmother of a 3-year-old boy whose body was found at a ramshackle compound in northern New Mexico with child abuse charges that can carry a penalty of life in prison.

Siraj Ibn Wahhaj and his partner Jany Leveille are accused of failing to provide medication to a son of Wahhaj’s who had a severe medical condition that was well known to the family, according to charges of child abuse resulting in death and conspiracy to commit child abuse filed by the district attorney’s office in Taos.

Wahhaj is the father of Abdul-ghani Wahhaj, whose remains were discovered inside an underground tunnel at a compound near the Colorado state line.

The defendants were among five adults and 11 children found living in squalor during an Aug. 3 raid on the compound. The boy’s remains were found three days later.

A lawyer for Siraj Ibn Wahhaj did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Kelly Golightley, an attorney for Leveille, said she had not seen the charges or accompanying warrant and that her client maintains her innocence.

Leveille also is being held on accusations by federal immigration authorities that she overstayed her non-immigrant visitor visa after arriving 20 years ago in the United States from her native Haiti. She was returned Thursday to Taos from a federal holding facility in Texas.

The boy initially was reported missing last year from Jonesboro, Georgia, by his mother, Hakima Ramzi, after Wahhaj said he was taking the child to a park and didn’t return.

In an affidavit accompanying the new charges, prosecutors outlined allegations that Wahhaj and his son left Georgia without taking medications the boy needed to treat severe health problems, including seizures that stemmed from a lack of oxygen and blood flow at birth.

The affidavit alleges that Leveille and Wahhaj witnessed the boy’s seizures and knew he had a diagnosed seizure disorder but apparently provided no medication and took no action to seek proper medical care.

Prosecutors quote an extensive account of the child’s death as written in a journal entry that they attribute to Leveille, indicating that Abdul-ghani died in late December 2017 as the exhausted boy’s heartbeat faded in and out during a religious ritual accompanied by a reading of the Quran and aimed at casting out demonic spirits.

The ritual and the boy’s death were described at earlier court hearings by an FBI agent who drew on information from interviews with teenagers who lived at the compound. The descriptions conform with aspects of an alternative, meditative Islamic healing ritual called ruqya.

The New Mexico Office of Medical Inspector has not yet determined how Abdul-ghani died. Spokeswoman Alex Sanchez said Friday that the agency is performing analyses.

All five defendants arrested at the compound have been charged with child neglect and are being held in jail.

Also Friday, prosecutors filed a lengthy appeal of a district judge’s order that could allow at least three of the defendants to be released on house arrest with ankle monitors.

Prosecutors have alleged that older children were trained to handle firearms to possibly order attacks on government institutions.

Judge Sarah Backus said the previous evidence provided by prosecutors was troubling but did not indicate any clear threat to public safety from the defendants, who have no criminal records.

That decision led to death threats against the judge and outraged calls from politicians — including New Mexico Gov. Susana Martinez and candidates vying to succeed her — to reconsider recent reforms to the state’s bail procedures.

battlerythym on August 25th, 2018 at 21:54 UTC »

Why exactly were child murderers allowed bail?

jeefcakes on August 25th, 2018 at 21:07 UTC »

There have also been many apparently credible reports explaining how this area was set up as a training area for kids to conduct school shootings.

How is this not front page news on every outlet?

elinordash on August 25th, 2018 at 19:42 UTC »

This whole story is crazy.

The little boy (Abdul-ghani Wahhaj) was basically kidnapped by his father (Siraj Ibn Wahhaj Jr.) in November. Supposedly Georgia police didn't take much interest in the case because Siraj and his wife weren't legally divorced, so there was no custody order to violate. In December Abdul, Siraj Jr, and his new girlfriend were in a car accident in Alabama. If Georgia had been more active, he could have been found at this point as he was briefly in an Alabama hospital. A Georgia court issued an arrest warrant for Siraj Jr. in January over the custody issue. It is strange to me that it took so long, particularly since Abdul had serious ongoing medical issues, but it gets even weirder.

In January, Siraj Jr. and his extended family set up a shanty town on someone else's land in New Mexico. The press keeps calling it a compound, which makes it sound like a series of buildings. It was a gigantic plastic tent surrounded by a fence made with old tires and other salvaged materials. It looks like something some country middle schoolers might make and call a fort.

The New Mexico property owners repeatedly reported the shanty town. Some dark skinned people in traditional Muslim dress built a shanty town on their land and the police declined to do anything. (Prepare yourself for a sarcastic comment:) Aren't rural police departments supposedly full of racists who like to shoot people? (Sarcasm Over) Why let this slide?

Abdul had a seizure disorder and needed leg braces to walk. Siraj Jr. and the other adults involved believed Abdul was possessed by evil spirits and they spent the next several months giving him an exorcism. There were 11 other children in the shanty town. They were all malnourished and the adults involved are being charged with child neglect.

The New Mexico property owners start googling and they figure out who Siraj Jr. and Abdul are. They report a kidnapping in addition to the shanty town. And it still takes police two months to do anything despite the Georgia arrest warrant.

Siraj Jr. is not an immigrant. He was born in Brooklyn. I don't know the status of Siraj's mother, but his father (Siraj Sr.) was also born in Brooklyn. Siraj Sr. is a slightly sketchy Imam in Brooklyn. He speaks favorably of Sharia Law and had some connection to the 1993 WTC bombers, but he doesn't have known ties to post-90s terrorism or extremism.

The local police basically destroyed the shanty town after the arrests. They didn't go in and bag everything, they just ripped it apart and left a huge mess. Which is really strange.

The people involved have been let out on bail, which has caused an uproar in New Mexico but apparently the law limits who can be held until trial.

I think federal law enforcement must have been telling local law enforcement to wait and that's why the shanty town lasted so long.

Made some small edits based on replies