Convicted Felon GRANTED Citizenship—Then Killed Federal Employee…

Law enforcement officers arresting a man with tattoos in an urban environment

A British national with convictions for sexual battery, assault with a deadly weapon, and attacking a police officer was granted American citizenship in 2022 and now stands accused of murdering two people including a federal employee in a spree of random violence across Georgia.

When Criminal Records Don’t Stop Citizenship

Olaolukitan Adon Abel arrived in America from the United Kingdom carrying baggage that should have raised red flags at every checkpoint. His criminal record reads like a catalog of escalating violence: sexual battery, battery against a police officer, obstruction, assault with a deadly weapon, and vandalism. Yet in 2022, the naturalization process welcomed him as a full American citizen. DeKalb County residents would pay the price for that decision with their lives just years later.

The attacks unfolded across ordinary public spaces where Americans go about their daily routines. Lauren Bullis, a Department of Homeland Security employee, was walking her dog when Abel allegedly shot and stabbed her to death. An unidentified woman was gunned down outside a Checkers restaurant. A homeless man suffered multiple gunshot wounds outside a Kroger in Brookhaven, clinging to life in critical condition. Random acts of violence, authorities say, with no apparent connection between victims beyond their tragic misfortune.

The Federal Employee Connection

Lauren Bullis’s murder carries particular significance beyond the personal tragedy for her family and colleagues. As a DHS employee, she worked for the very agency now scrutinizing how someone with Abel’s background obtained citizenship. The irony cuts deep: a federal worker dedicated to homeland security allegedly killed by someone the system failed to keep out of the country or, at minimum, failed to prevent from naturalizing despite obvious character deficiencies.

DHS Secretary Markwayne Mullin characterized the attacks as “acts of pure evil” in his statement to media outlets. His remarks pointedly highlighted the timeline of Abel’s naturalization during the previous administration, while noting that current leadership has implemented measures to ensure individuals with criminal histories and lacking good moral character cannot attain citizenship. The statement positions the tragedy as evidence of past policy failures and justification for present reforms.

What the Vetting Process Missed

The naturalization process requires applicants to demonstrate good moral character, a standard that typically excludes anyone convicted of serious crimes. Sexual battery alone should disqualify an applicant. Add battery against a police officer and assault with a deadly weapon, and the question becomes not whether Abel should have been denied citizenship, but how many people failed to do their jobs in allowing his application to proceed. Each conviction represented a warning sign, a flashing red light that this individual posed potential danger to American communities.

U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services handles hundreds of thousands of naturalization applications annually, relying on background checks, fingerprinting, and interviews to screen applicants. The system depends on accurate record sharing between agencies, thorough review by adjudicators, and clear standards for what constitutes disqualifying conduct. When someone with Abel’s documented history slips through, it suggests systemic breakdown rather than isolated oversight. The question facing policymakers now is whether stricter measures can prevent similar cases without unfairly burdening legitimate applicants.

Random Violence and Public Safety

The randomness of these attacks amplifies community fear in ways targeted violence does not. When victims have no connection to their attacker and attacks occur in everyday public spaces, no one feels safe. Walking a dog, grabbing fast food, seeking shelter outside a grocery store, these mundane activities became death sentences. DeKalb County residents now face the psychological aftermath of knowing that ordinary routines carry extraordinary risk when violent predators move among them unchecked.

Abel faces two counts of murder, aggravated assault, and weapons charges. The legal process will determine his guilt or innocence, but the broader policy questions remain regardless of trial outcomes. How did citizenship vetting fail so spectacularly? What reforms can prevent repeat failures? And how do we balance legitimate security concerns with America’s heritage as a nation that welcomes immigrants who genuinely seek better lives and contribute positively to their communities? The victims of these attacks deserve answers, and American communities deserve systems that actually protect them from known threats.

Sources:

Suspect in string of random attacks in Georgia is naturalized citizen from UK, DHS says

Homeland Security worker and another woman are killed in a series of Atlanta-area attacks