New
Orleans attack: FBI believes suspect acted alone in ‘act of terrorism’
Investigators
had initially suggested others may have been involved in New Year’s Day attack
that killed 14 people
Anna Betts
and Alice Herman
Thu 2 Jan
2025 14.02 EST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/jan/02/new-orleans-truck-attack-suspect
The FBI said
on Thursday that it now believed the suspect acted alone in an “act of
terrorism” in the truck attack in New Orleans on New Year’s Day that killed 14
and injured dozens more when a man drove a rented pickup into a crowd
celebrating on busy Bourbon Street.
The chief
suspect, the 42-year-old US citizen Shamsud-Din Jabbar, was killed as he shot
at police and officers returned fire, bringing the total deaths from the
incident to 15, with more than 35 injured.
The FBI also
announced that it had found no definitive link between the New Orleans attack
and the explosion that occurred later on Wednesday of a Tesla Cybertruck
outside a hotel owned by Donald Trump in Las Vegas, which resulted in the death
of the driver.
Over the
past 24 hours there had been contradictory reports on whether the suspect in
New Orleans had associates in the planning or execution of the attack, while
the authorities also had said they were looking into possible connections
between the New Orleans and the Las Vegas incidents, before updating the public
on Thursday on both fronts.
Christopher
Raia, deputy assistant director of the FBI’s counter-terrorism division, said
that the evidence had now shown Shamsud-Din Jabbar was solely responsible for
the New Orleans attack and had professed his allegiance to Islamic State.
“This was an
act of terrorism. It was premeditated and an evil act … He was 100% inspired by
Isis,” Raia said, adding: “We know that he specifically picked out Bourbon
Street. Not sure why.”
The FBI also
revealed that Jabbar posted five videos on his Facebook account in the hours
before the attack in which he proclaimed his support for the Islamist militant
group, while also previewing the violence that he would soon unleash in the
city’s famed French Quarter.
The videos
included one in which he said he originally planned to harm his family and
friends, but was concerned that news headlines would not focus on the “war
between the believers and the disbelievers”, Raia said. He also left a last
will and testament, the FBI said.
Earlier,
senior FBI figures and the attorney general of Louisiana had said they believed
“known associates” and “multiple people” were probably involved.
The attack
took place just after 3am local time on Wednesday morning in the French Quarter
of New Orleans, which was crowded with people celebrating the new year.
Jabbar, from
Houston, Texas, drove a rented white pickup truck between the 100 and 400
blocks of Bourbon Street, crashing into revelers and mowing many down, then
shooting from the truck, hitting two police officers before he was killed.
Jabbar, who
served in the US army for 13 years, was wearing body armor and a helmet,
according to a law-enforcement bulletin, and was displaying an Islamic State
flag mounted on a pipe in the bed of the vehicle. The FBI is investigating the
attack as an “act of terrorism”.
Abdur-Rahim
Jabbar, Jabbar’s younger brother, told the Associated Press on Thursday that it
“doesn’t feel real” that his brother could have done this. “I never would have
thought it’d be him,” he said. “It’s completely unlike him.”
He said that
his brother had been isolated in the last few years, but that he had also been
in touch with him and he did not see any signs of radicalization.
“It’s
completely contradictory to who he was and how his family and his friends know
him,” he said.
Investigators
found guns and what appeared to be improvised explosive devices in the vehicle.
Louisiana’s
attorney general, Liz Murrill, said the explosive devices associated with the
attack appear to have been manufactured at an Airbnb in New Orleans that she
said was rented out “for that purpose”.
In addition,
Murrill said, a house fire occurred on Wednesday morning “that was connected to
this event, where we believe the IEDs were being made”.
A New
Orleans emergency management source said firefighters who put out that
intentionally set blaze spotted a gasoline can, a drill, and some type of
adhesive material. That discovery prompted them to call police, who determined
the materials in the home were meant to make bombs connected to the attack on
Bourbon Street.
On Thursday
morning, the New Orleans police superintendent, Anne Kirkpatrick, said on NBC’s
Today that authorities were investigating “people of interest” related to the
attack.
“We have
people of interest, they are not people who are suspects at this time,”
Kirkpatrick said, adding: “The FBI is tracking down everybody.”
The vehicles
involved in the attacks in New Orleans and Las Vegas were rented using the
car-sharing app Turo, and the suspects in both incidents, who were both killed,
had been or were in the military, leading to questions being asked, including
by Joe Biden, about whether the events were connected. That link was scotched
by authorities later on Thursday.
A
spokesperson for Turo said the company was cooperating with police. The company
also said that “we do not believe that either renter … had a criminal
background that would have identified them as a security threat”.
As New
Orleans reeled from the attack, investigators continued to search for answers
and potential accomplices.
The Sugar
Bowl, a college football playoff, took place in New Orleans on Thursday. The
game, which was originally scheduled for Wednesday, had been postponed due to
the attack.
Kirkpatrick
said the event would have Super Bowl-level security, with collaboration from
local, federal and military partners.
“We are
going to have absolutely hundreds of officers and staff lining our streets,
lining Bourbon Street, lining the French Quarter,” Kirkpatrick said. “We are
staffing up at the same level if not more so than we were prepared for Super
Bowl.”
It was the
deadliest Islamic State-inspired assault on American soil in years, laying bare
what federal officials have warned is a resurgent international terrorist
threat. That threat is emerging as the FBI and other agencies brace for
dramatic leadership upheaval after Donald Trump takes office.
Seven years
ago, New Orleans officials began installing adjustable barriers at
intersections in the French Quarter to temporarily prevent vehicles from
entering the tourist area where the narrow streets are typically teeming with
pedestrians every night.
But the
steel bollards were in the process of being replaced and were not engaged on
New Year’s Eve, which witnesses said could have prevented the truck speeding
down the street in the way it did.
Ramon
Antonio Vargas contributed reporting
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