“He would walk up to them and put his arm around them or something. “He's a homosexual and he was trying to pick up men,” said Mr Van Horn. Jim Van Horn, 71, said he was a regular at the club. I said, ‘Hey,’ and he turned and said, ‘Hey,’” and nodded his head,” Mr West told the Los Angeles Times. Mr West was dropping off a friend at the club when he noticed Mateen – whom he knew by sight but not by name – crossing the street, wearing a dark cap and carrying a black phone. They had never met in person, though, until they crossed paths by chance an hour before the shooting. Kevin West said that Mateen had contacted him on gay dating apps, and the pair exchanged messages for around a year. “I was not out at the time, so I declined his offer.” “We went to a few gay bars with him,” he said. Mateen had asked him out, the classmate, who did not want to be named, told local television in Orlando. And a colleague in his academy class said he believed Mateen was gay. In 2006 Mateen attempted to join the police. Others who knew the 29-year-old have described him in less reticent terms. “He might have been gay but chose to hide his true identity out of anger and shame.” But he did feel very strongly about homosexuality. She continued: "He never personally or physically made any indication while we were together, of that. Silent for three seconds, she shook her head a little and said: "I don't know." Speaking in Boulder, Colorado, she was asked directly by CNN whether she believed he was gay. "So, I feel like it's a side of him or a part of him that he lived but probably didn't want everybody to know about." "When we had got married, he confessed to me about his past - that was recent at that time - and that he very much enjoyed going to clubs and the nightlife," said Ms Yusufiy, who divorced Mateen in 2011 and said he was abusive and unstable. Mateen’s ex-wife, Sifora Yusufiy, has said he alluded to a secret private life before they were married – a marriage arranged online in 2008, which lasted two years. Guys come in at lunchtime, then go home to their wives.” He was about to get caught, and couldn’t cope. “You know exactly how it went,” she said. Vicky Bebout, 68-year-old doyenne of the resort, nodded. And I was able to deal with it – unlike him.” But I was never part of a community that would kill me for my sexuality. “I went through that self hatred,” he told The Telegraph. So when I heard he frequented gay bars around here, it all made sense.”Ī member of the Independent Fundamental Baptist church, which condemns homosexuality, Mr Datz said he had some sense of what could have motivated Mateen.
“I’m not on gay dating apps or anything anymore, but he certainly looks familiar.
“I recognise his face,” said Justin Datz, 33, who works at Parliament – a hotel and resort which has been home to the city’s gay community since 1975. Yet others who knew the New York-born killer have painted a picture of a gay man who could not come to terms with his sexuality. A photo from Instagram Salman shows Mateen kissing a child, with the caption: “Daddy’s boy.” Her few remaining pictures show her smiling and posing with Mateen and a child believed to be their son. She has not spoken publicly and has scrubbed her social media accounts since the attack. In December 2015 she is believed to have left Florida and moved in with relatives in Rodeo, California. Ms Salman lived in a suburb of Chicago before moving to Fort Pierce with Mateen in November 2012. On Tuesday police were considering pressing charges against Omar Mateen’s second wife, Nour Salman, 30, who told the FBI she went with him to scope out possible targets, and that she had tried to stop him from carrying out the attack.
The man who murdered 49 people at a gay club in Orlando was a closet homosexual who used gay dating apps and frequented gay bars, according to friends and locals in the city.