At least, that is what his father says.
Police Commissioner Bill Bratton had described Zale Thompson’s unprovoked and targeted attack on the cops as a “terrorist act,” which Bratton said was not linked to any organized terror group.
But Thompson’s father, Ralph Thompson, offered another motive for last week’s attack to The New York Post.
“He wanted white people to pay for all that slavery and all that racism,” Thompson said of his 32-year-old son, who was shot dead at the scene in Jamaica. The younger Thompson slashed police officer Dennis Healy, 25, in the head with his ax and officer Joseph Meeker, 24, in the arm.
“I think he committed suicide — and he was taking one of y’all with him,” the elder Thompson said. “He just said, ‘They [whites] have to pay for all their unfairness.’”
Whether Ralph Thompson was expressing his son’s feeling or his own is could not be immediately determined.
Whatever Zane Thompson’s motives — he was a recent convert to Islam and had posted anti-American rants on Facebook and YouTube — what is known about him is that his life was on a downward trajectory.
Involuntarily discharged from the Navy in California in 2003, he had six arrests in Oxnard, California. He moved back to New York, first to the East New York apartment where he had grown up, and then back and forth between his parents’ home in Queens.
According to law enforcement officials, he spent hours browsing radical websites connected to the Islamic State, al-Qaida and al-Shabaab, the Somali-based militant Islamic group, leaving comments on Facebook and YouTube that attacked Christians and Jews.
“If the Zionists and the Crusaders had never invaded and colonized the Islamic lands after WWI, then there would be no need for jihad!” a person named Zane Thompson wrote on a YouTube video. “Which is better, to sit around and do nothing, or to jihad.”
In another post, he wrote, “America’s military might is strong abroad but they have never faced an internal mass revolt…. We are scattered and decentralized, we can use this as an advantage. They are centralized and strong, which can be exploited as a weakness.”
Thompson’s attack came a day after a similarly unprovoked shooting spree in the Canadian Parliament by Michael Zehaf-Bibeau — a Canadian-born, self-radicalized Muslim whose life was also on a downward slide.
Perhaps, in retrospect, Canadian law enforcement might have identified and monitored Zehaf-Bibeau as a potential terrorist after he attempted to leave Canada for Syria to join the Islamic State.
But how do law enforcement agencies monitor a “home-grown” and “lone-wolf” future killer such as Thompson if he hasn’t been identified as such?
Intensive monitoring of jihadi websites? Establishing relationships with the community where he lives or works? If Bratton and crew are making efforts in these or other directions, they are not saying.
But given the anger and distrust from past attempts to infiltrate mosques and other Muslim institutions, the latter won’t be easy to do.