In a scene that has left authorities and the public stunned, an 18-second live video posted immediately after the May 18, 2026, attack on the Islamic Center of San Diego captured one of the teenage shooters in a moment of raw breakdown. Caleb Liam Vazquez, 18, reportedly turned on his phone and urged his accomplice, 17-year-old Cain Clark, to shoot him as they fled the scene of the deadly assault.

The attack occurred around 11:30 a.m. at San Diego’s largest mosque, which also operates a school full of children. Armed with weapons taken from a family member’s home, the two teens opened fire outside the building. A brave security guard quickly herded children and staff into locked classrooms, likely preventing a far greater tragedy. Three men were killed: the heroic guard, a respected community elder, and another worshiper. No children were physically injured, but the psychological trauma will last a lifetime.

After the shooting, the pair escaped a short distance by car. Police later discovered both dead from apparent self-inflicted wounds. But before that end, Vazquez’s brief live stream offered a disturbing glimpse into their final minutes. In the short clip, he appears frantic and emotional, directly telling Clark to end his life. The video cut off abruptly, becoming a key piece of evidence in the ongoing investigation.

The shooters had reportedly connected online and bonded over extreme anti-Islamic views and broader hatred. Authorities recovered dozens of firearms, a crossbow, anti-Muslim writings, and what appears to be a suicide note. Hours before the attack, Clark’s mother had called police to report her son missing, suicidal, and that guns and a vehicle had been stolen — warnings that tragically went unheeded in time.

Vazquez himself had drawn police attention in 2025 over concerns about his fascination with extremist ideology and mass violence. Both teens’ social media histories showed disturbing signs: camouflage imagery, violent content, and symbols linked to hate groups. Their rapid radicalization highlights how quickly vulnerable young people can spiral through online echo chambers into real-world violence.

The Islamic Center community is mourning deeply while praising the security guard’s quick thinking. Vigils have brought together Muslim leaders, interfaith groups, and city officials calling for unity against rising hate. CAIR and other advocacy organizations are pressing for stronger action against online radicalization and inflammatory political rhetoric that fuels such attacks.

This tragedy has reignited national conversations about several critical issues: how to spot warning signs in troubled teens, the responsibility of social media platforms, and the need for better mental health intervention before ideology turns deadly. The fact that both perpetrators were so young has left many asking how two boys from the San Diego area could plan and carry out such an attack.

Investigators are still piecing together the full timeline, digital communications, and motives. The 18-second video, though brief, humanizes the shooters in their final panic while raising painful questions. Was it regret? Panic? A planned dramatic ending? Whatever the reason, it froze a moment of human collapse after an act driven by hate.

For the families of the three victims, no video or explanation can ease their pain. The security guard died protecting others — a final act of courage in a place meant for peace. The mosque has vowed to remain open and welcoming, refusing to let terror silence faith or community.

As San Diego heals, this attack serves as a grim reminder that hatred spread online can explode offline with devastating speed. The 18 seconds Vazquez broadcast may be one of the most haunting final messages in recent American crime history — a desperate plea that came far too late to stop the horror he helped unleash.