his parents also led him to experiment way new church. bryant started attending an evangelical protestant church according to his mother. he seemed to be looking for something, seeking direction in his life. but attending the new church did nothing to quail his growing anger. his mother says bryant became too much for her to handle. so she went to court and gave up custody of him. at one point, the derosh family found bryant sleeping in his car. it was one of those moments that no place to go and we offer him the house and he was more welcome to come and he did stay here for about a month or so. she says they lost touch with bryant when he moved into this house to live with his father and his father, soon-to-be wife but it was an easier arrangement. his father says bryant couldn t come to terms with his plan to remarry. unhappy living with his father,
trend, homegrown terrorists. radicalization is definitely on the rise in the united states. american citizens radicalizing eager to kill their countrymen. vinas is the terrorist next door, the american al qaeda. it s clear now the number of americans who have become radicalized and willing to kill for al qaeda or some other terrorist group is on the rise. times square a name by the name of faisal shahzad to detonate a car bomb. but this is a story about an american-born citizen. a name by the name of bryant neal vinas. he interview up in suburbia. he was an altar boy. he loved baseball and he become a terrorist and plotted al qaeda to explode a bomb in new york. cnn s international corporate nic robertson has spent nearly a year to track vinas track of terror. this ac360 special investigation is an intimate and chilling portrait of a homegrown terrorist. al qaeda s target, the busiest commuter railroad in the united states, the long island rail road in new york. hu
his sister. he refused to accept his parent s separation. bryant s rebebling against his parents also led him to experiment way new church. bryant started attending an evangelical protestant church according to his mother. he seemed to be looking for something, seeking direction in his life. but attending the new church did nothing to quayle his growing anger. his mother says bryant became too much for her to handle. so she went to court and gave up custody of him. at one point, the derosh family found bryant sleeping in his car. it was one of those moments that no place to go and we offer him the house and he was more welcome to come and he did stay here for about a month or so. she says they lost touch with bryant when he moved into this house to live with his father and his father, soon-to-be wife but it was an easier arrangement.