Muslim groups demand federal hate-crime probe of N.C. slayings

Thousands honor Chapel Hill shooting victims as FBI probes hate crime claims

RALEIGH, North Carolina -- Muslim groups planned to take their demands for a federal hate-crime investigation of three young Muslims slain in North Carolina to the White House on Friday.

The groups said on social media that they would hold prayers in front of the White House on the Muslim Sabbath, hours after the FBI's North Carolina office said agents were launching an inquiry parallel to a police homicide investigation. CBS News correspondent Jeff Pegues reports that the FBI is helping Chapel Hill police with evidence collection and processing.

Thousands mourn death of 3 Muslim students

Craig Stephen Hicks, 46, is charged with first-degree murder. Police say he shot 23-year-old Deah Shaddy Barakat; his 21-year-old wife, Yusor Mohammad Abu-Salha; and her sister, 19-year-old Razan Mohammad Abu-Salha over a long-standing parking dispute in the condominium complex where he lived with the newlywed couple. But the families of the victims have said they were gunned down because of their religion.

"This has hate crime written all over it," the women's father, Mohammad Yousif Abu-Salha said.

The FBI said Thursday that its preliminary inquiry seeks "to determine whether or not any federal laws were violated" while it continues to help police in the university town of Chapel Hill process evidence for their homicide investigation.

Chapel Hill police have said they are investigating whether religious or ethnic hatred motivated Hicks in any way, and federal investigators previously have said hate crimes haven't been ruled out.

3 Muslim students killed; hate crime or parking dispute?

Mohammad Yousif Abu-Salha reiterated to about 5,000 people attending a Thursday memorial service for the three victims that he wanted the FBI to investigate.

"Let's stand up and be honest and see what these three children were martyred about. It was not about a parking spot," Abu-Salah said during the memorial service at North Carolina State University, which all three victims had attended.

Hicks described himself as a self-described "gun toting" atheist. Barakat's former roommate said Hicks complained regularly about cars parking in unreserved spaces open to visitors, expressing his objections with a handgun strapped to his hip in a holster. Members of both families have said the victims reported similar encounters.

Neighbors described him as angry and confrontational. His ex-wife told The Associated Press that he was obsessed with the 1993 shooting-rampage movie "Falling Down" and showed "no compassion at all." His current wife said she believes the killings "had nothing do with religion or the victims' faith." She then announced that she's divorcing him.

Hicks had called to have his neighbors' cars towed so many times that the towing company eventually banned him, reports CBS affiliate WRAL.

"It was often more than the average person," Christopher Lafreniere, with Barnes Towing, said Thursday. "It actually got to the point that he was not allowed to call a car in. If he called, we wouldn't go out."

Lafreniere told WRAL that in 2013 he was having an argument with a driver over a tow at the Finley Forest complex and Hicks came out of his apartment with a handgun to say that he had called police.

His current wife, Karen Hicks, said that her husband "champions the rights of others" and that the killings "had nothing do with religion or the victims' faith." She then issued another brief statement through her lawyer, saying she's divorcing him.

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