Explainer
New
Orleans truck attack: what we know so far
Attacker
Shamsud-Din Jabbar drove a truck into a crowd, killing 15 people and injuring
35 others
New Orleans
truck attack – live updates
Ramon
Antonio Vargas in New Orleans
Thu 2 Jan
2025 02.53 CET
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/jan/02/new-orleans-truck-attack-what-we-know-so-far
A man
driving a pickup truck that bore the flag of the Islamic State group wrought
carnage in New Orleans’ during New Year’s celebrations, killing 15 people as he
steered around a police blockade and slammed into revelers before being shot
dead by police.
The FBI said
it was investigating the attack early on Wednesday as a terrorist act and does
not believe the driver acted alone. Investigators found guns and what appeared
to be an improvised explosive device in the vehicle, along with other devices
elsewhere in the city’s famed French Quarter.
Here’s what
we know:
What
happened
The
attacker, identified as 42-year-old Shimsud-Din Jabbar of Houston, Texas,
managed to drive a rented white pickup truck between the 100 and 400 blocks of
Bourbon Street in the lower part of the French Quarter, which was packed with
people celebrating New Year’s Eve.
He was also
firing a rifle from the truck while wearing body armor as well as a helmet,
according to a law enforcement bulletin, and was flying the flag of the Islamic
state (Isis) group mounted on a pipe erected in the bed of the vehicle. He
exchanged gun fire with several police officers – wounding two of them – and
was shot dead by the officers.
About 30
minutes after Jabbar was shot dead, investigators found a pipe bomb with nails
and suspected C4 explosives inside an ice chest left near police patrol cars at
the corner of Bourbon and Orleans streets, roughly three blocks from where the
attack ended.
The bulletin
said surveillance camera footage showed three men and a woman planted that
device. But CNN later reported that investigators have since ruled out those
people as having anything to do with planting the devices.
A second
such device was found about a block away from where the first one had been
found. Investigators spotted a third such possible device in a purple suitcase
near the corner of North Rampart Street and Esplanade Avenue, toward the upper
edge of the French Quarter.
Two of those
devices had been confirmed as pipe bombs concealed within coolers and were
wired for remote detonation, the bulletin said. Investigators discovered a
corresponding remote in Jabbar’s truck, which also had mason jars containing a
clear liquid consistent with explosives in his truck.
Officers
determined a fourth possible device was not explosive.
Investigators
learned Jabbar was staying at a short-term rental in New Orleans’ St Roch
neighborhood, about two miles from the French Quarter. They arrived to find the
place had been intentionally set on fire, and – after firefighters brought the
blaze under control – discovered bomb-making materials in the home.
The Houston
news station KPRC2 reported capturing drone video showing a man at a home
connected to Jabbar there surrendering to authorities. Earlier, the FBI said
agents in Houston were “conducting law enforcement activity” at an area in the
north part of the city in connection with the attack in New Orleans.
What we know
about the attacker
Jabbar said
in a promotional video for one of his businesses that he was born and raised in
Beaumont, Texas.
He served in
the US army for 13 years, where he served as a human resource specialist and
information technology specialist from 2007 until 2015. He then joined the army
reserve as an IT specialist until 2020, holding the rank of staff sergeant at
the end of service, according to an army official. He deployed to Afghanistan
from February 2009 to January 2010.
In addition
to serving in the army, Jabbar had previously enlisted in the navy in August
2004 under a delayed entry program but was discharged a month later.
Jabbar
graduated with a computer information systems degree from Georgia State
University after studying there from 2015 to 2017, school officials told
Atlanta News First. Corporate records show that Jabbar got involved in a series
of real estate businesses in recent years.
The
consulting firm Deloitte issued a statement saying Jabbar had “served in a
staff-level role” there since being hired in 2021.
“We are
shocked to learn of reports today that the individual identified as a suspect
had any association with our firm,” Deloitte’s statement said. “Like everyone,
we are outraged by this shameful and senseless act of violence and are doing
all we can to assist authorities in their investigation.”
The New York
Times reported Jabbar was twice divorced. Dwayne Marsh, the new husband of
Jabbar’s second ex-wife, Nakedra Charrlle, said Jabbar had converted to Islam
at some point. More recently, Jabbar’s behaviour had become erratic, he said,
prompting the couple to stop allowing Jabbar to spend time with the daughters
he shared with Charrlle.
What we know
about possible accomplices
Federal
officials and local law enforcement in New Orleans have said that Jabbar did
not act alone and that they are looking for accomplices.
The bulletin
said surveillance camera footage showed three men and a woman planting one of
the explosive devices. But CNN later reported that investigators had since
ruled out those people as having anything to do with planting the devices.
Meanwhile, a
second car near the attack is drawing focus. Security cameras owned by New
Orleans’ city government identified one car in particular was following the
truck with which Jabbar carried out the attack, according to the intelligence
bulletin. The bulletin said both the truck and that second car share a link:
each was owned by a Texas resident who previously lived in the New Orleans
suburb of Harvey, and both were rented out. Police descended on the owner’s
address in Harvey but did not find him there, the bulletin said. ABC News
reported speaking to the owner, who described having spoken with the FBI.
What we know
about the victims
The attack
claimed the lives of at least 15 people, according to the New Orleans coroner,
and injured more than 30 others.
Local media
in New Orleans identified the first known fatalities of the attack as Nikyra
Cheyenne Dedeaux, 18, who had traveled to New Orleans from nearby Gulfport,
Mississippi, with a cousin and a friend; Reggie Hunter, a 37-year-old father of
two from Baton Rouge, Louisiana; and Tiger Bech, a 27-year-old Lafayette,
Louisiana, native and former football player. A fourth victim was named as
Nicole Perez, a 28-year-old mother and delicatessen manager from Metairie,
Louisiana, who was celebrating the new year with friends.
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