"Diversity Lottery Program" ( I kid you not).

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INS Denied Residency to LAX Gunman
Sat Jul 6, 4:58 PM ET By SANDRA MARQUEZ, Associated Press Writer LOS

ANGELES (AP) - The government had started deportation proceedings in 1996
against the Egyptian immigrant who gunned down two people at Los Angeles
International Airport. But the following year, he gained U.S. residency
because of his wife, officials said Saturday.

It wasn't clear what caused the Immigration and Naturalization Service to
reject Hesham Mohamed Hadayet's first petition for permanent residency, INS
spokesman Francisco Arcaute said.

The deportation process was started after that rejection, then was stopped
when Hadayet gained residency in 1997 through his wife, Hala, who had
received an immigration visa through the Department of States' Diversity
Lottery Program, Arcaute said.

Hadayet's uncle, Hassan Mostaffa Mahfouz, told The Associated Press in Egypt
that Hadayet had only about a year remaining before he qualified for U.S.
citizenship.
Hadayet was happy in the United States, Mahfouz said.

"I don't believe what happened," he said. "I felt that he could not do that."
On the Fourth of July, Hadayet was the fourth person in line at the ticket
counter for El Al, Israel's national airline, when he began firing, killing
two people and wounding three others, authorities said. He fired off 10 or 11
bullets before he was shot dead by a security guard.

His wife and sons, Adam, 8, and Omar, 14, were visiting family in Egypt at
the time.
FBI ( <A HREF="http://rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/ap/ap_on_re_us/inlinks/*http://rd.yahoo.com/DailyNews/manual/*http://search.news.yahoo.com/search/news?p=%22FBI%22&c=&n=20&yn=c&c=news&cs=nw";>news</A> - <A HREF="http://rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/ap/ap_on_re_us/inlinks/*http://rd.yahoo.com/DailyNews/manual/*http://dir.yahoo.com/Government/U_S__Government/Executive_Branch/Departments_and_Agencies/Department_of_Justice__DOJ_/Federal_Bureau_of_Investigation__FBI_/";>web sites</A>) special agent Richard Garcia said Saturday it still
wasn't known if Hadayet harbored anti-Israel feelings, as a former employee
claimed he did, and may have been motivated by hate.

Authorities had also not ruled out terrorism as a motive, and they were also
considering the possibility that Hadayet was despondent over his personal or
business affairs. Israeli officials said they would consider the attack an
act of terror unless it was proven otherwise.

"We are pursuing all three motives," Garcia said.

What is clear, Garcia said, is that Hadayet walked into the airport intending
to kill. He was armed with a .45-caliber semiautomatic Glock pistol, a 9 mm
handgun and a 6-inch knife.

The FBI searched the family's apartment and took a computer, books, binders
and other material, but released no details Saturday of what they contained.
Autopsy results of the suspect were expected to be released late Saturday.

Abdul Zahav, a man who said he worked for Hadayet until he was fired two
years ago, said Hadayet once told him he hated all Israelis. "He kept all his
anger inside him," Zahav said.

A bumper sticker on Hadayet's front door read, "Read the Koran." However,
Hadayet was apparently an unknown in the mosques attended by most of Southern
California's 1 million Arab Americans.

After the FBI released his name as the gunman, members of the Muslim Public
Affairs Council in Los Angeles began calling members and mosques in suburban
Orange County where he lived. No one recognized his name.

"It's a very bizarre case because this man is unknown to the community and
was not part of any organization," said Salam Al-Marayati, director of the
council. "At this point it just seems like the work of a deranged individual."

Police records in Irvine show officers little contact with Hadayet over the
10 years he lived there. Police were called to his apartment once for a
domestic dispute in May 1996, three months after his petition for permanent
residency was rejected. They found Hadayet and his wife had been in a
"physical confrontation," but no charges were filed.

The only other Irvine police files on Hadayet were when he was robbed in 1997
while driving a cab and when he was listed as a witness and victim in a fraud
case reported in 2001.

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