The ex-wife of David Anderson, the suspected Jersey City shooter who carried out an anti-Semitic massacre, revealed that the 47-year-old enjoyed making rap music, often read the Bible and was not violent during their marriage.

Kathleen, 41, had just arrived home from a round of Christmas shopping in Atlanta when a man who identified as an FBI agent introduced himself to her in the driveway.

Of all the reason the FBI agents could have approached her at her Georgia home on Wednesday, information regarding her ex-husband of three years, David Anderson, was not one of them.

David Anderson (pictured) were identified as a suspected Jersey City shooters that engaged in a shootout with law enforcement

Kathleen, who declined to give her last name for safety reasons, told CNN that she was shocked by what she learned her former lover was potential capable of.

'That was not the David I knew,' she said.

Kathleen said the Anderson she married in 2000, who was 'outgoing', 'attentive' and 'funny,' was a far cry from 47-year-old man who, along with 50-year-old Francine Graham, engaged in a hours-long shootout with with law enforcement.

Reports say that Anderson and Graham approached JC Kosher Supermarket on Tuesday afternoon in a stolen U-Haul truck with firearms drawn.

Anderson (pictured) and Francine Graham approached JC Kosher Supermarket and ambushed the store on Tuesday

The attack that followed would call SWAT, FBI and local authorities to the scene as they engaged in gunfire with the suspects, and evacuated the area.

In the end, three victims inside the supermarket, a Jersey City detective and the suspects were killed.

Kathleen remembers Anderson as 'a nice looking guy' she met at the Babenhausen base in Germany while serving with the US army.

Kathleen, then 22, met 28-year-old Anderson in 2000 when the former couple worked together in the same maintenance unit.

She worked as an electronics technician and he served as a fuel and electrical system repairer.

After just a few month of courting, the two quickly fell in love, eloped at a German courthouse and moved into an apartment together.

Anderson (left) and Graham (right) are believed to have carried out an anti-Semitic attack that killed four people

Kathleen recalls her days living with Anderson being filled with music after he set up a recording studio in their apartment and produced his own hip-hop songs.

She doesn't remember the exact lyrics he used, but maintains that they were never 'anything questionable' or materialistically coded with 'money or fancy cars.'

Kathleen said: 'I know what kind of a person I am. I wouldn't have felt comfortable with him rapping about anything negative. He wasn't a flashy person ... If anything (the lyrics) just had to do with just life, just him growing up in Jersey.'

Anderson admired his father, a musician who raised him after his mother passed away when he was young.

Kathleen says her ex-husband ever spouting extremism views or a hatred towards certain groups, but admits Anderson was religious and oftentimes carried the Bible.

Pictured: Jersey City police stationed at the scene one day after the hours-long gun battle erupted that afternoon

'He would just sit around (the apartment) and read it. He wasn't like a Bible pusher,' she said.

The couple's relationship ended in 2003 when Kathleen was discharged and returned Georgia while he remained in Germany.

Anderson initial planned to join her after his time was done in Germany, but the distance took a toll on the couple.

For Kathleen, the relationship became, 'kind of go distant. I know for me; I can't say for him. He really didn't want the divorce, but I did.'

Anderson moved back to New Jersey after the divorce and reached out to Kathleen one time in 2003.

'He was just checking to see how I was doing,' Kathleen said.

Throughout their time together, Kathleen said Anderson was never violent, but authorities found a very different picture when he returned to the U.S.

That same year, Anderson was arrested and sentenced to 11 months in jail in New Jersey for a possession of weapons charge.

Pictured: JC Kosher Supermarket with the storefront destroyed after authorities drove into the location with an armored car

Court records say Anderson had the weapons, 'with purpose to use it unlawfully against a person or property of another.'

In 2007, he was arrested in Ohio and sentenced to 14 months in jail for possession of a weapon.

Two year later Anderson was arrested in a domestic violence incident with his then girlfriend, in Kent, Ohio.

He allegedly told the woman: 'I'm gonna kill you. I feel like killing you.'

Anderson pleaded guilty to criminal mischief and was subsequently ordered to pay a $250 fine, as well as complete 16 hours of community service.

Occasionally, Kathleen would search for Anderson on social media sites only to be bombarded with a plethora of people with the same name.

CNN reports that an Instagram page appearing to belong to Anderson contained his music and posts about running a mobile store out of his van because he could not obtain a job as a felon.

'Revelations 1:13-15 Jesus comes from the tribe of JUDAH!!!!!!!!!!!! Y'all n***** better wake the f*** up before its too late. America has NOTHING for us but DEATH,' the most recent post from January 2015 says.

The publication also says a Facebook page under the name of Dawada Maqabath potentially belongs to Anderson.

Pictured: Officers at the scene in Jersey City during the dangerous shootout with Anderson and Graham

The accounts bio reads, 'Tool of TMH,' which may refer to 'The Most High.'

There have been reports that Anderson and Graham were inspired by the Black Hebrew Israelite movement.

The group generally believes black people are the true descendants of ancient Israelites, which can sometimes express extreme racial animosity towards Jewish and white people.

Kathleen never saw these posts and only thought of Anderson in fleeting moments when she would read anything about New Jersey.

When she heard the news of the Jersey City shooting on Tuesday, she briefly thought of Anderson.

But she had no idea Anderson had any suspected involvement until the FBI agent arrived at her door.

She remembers telling the agent, 'He was killed,' as the agent nodded.

'So that — that hurt too. It was hurtful all the way around. I hate that — how his life ended,' she said.

'Or that's a place in his mind that he was at. I guess that's the troubling part for me. Because I'm still in shock from just knowing that it was him.'



