Recordings
by New Orleans attack suspect express extreme religious views
Audio from
Shamsud-Din Jabbar contains diatribes against music, drugs, sex and other
sensuous pleasures
Ramon
Antonio Vargas in New Orleans
Thu 2 Jan
2025 14.50 EST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/jan/02/new-orleans-attack-suspect
Nearly a
year before he allegedly killed 14 people and injured dozens more by driving a
pickup truck flying an Islamic State (IS) flag through a crowd of New Year’s
revelers in New Orleans, Shamsud-Din Jabbar expressed his beliefs that music,
intoxicants, sex and other pleasures were evils deserving of destruction.
An account
on the SoundCloud platform under the name of Jabbar posted three recordings
totaling about 20 minutes each containing those and other expressions of
extremist religious views.
SoundCloud
did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The voice on the
recordings match that of Jabbar’s as heard on a video promoting a real-estate
business he was confirmed to have run before authorities say he aimed a deadly
terrorist attack at one of the world’s most famous festive drags, killing or
injuring a mix of local area residents and foreign visitors. He was shot dead
by police at the end of Wednesday’s attack on Bourbon Street, bringing the
total number dead to 15, the local coroner said Thursday.
Muslim
scholars have widely rejected the extremist positions IS or those who
sympathize with the terrorist group have with respect to the religion, saying
Islam teaches mercy and peace as well as the importance of justice.
Alluding to
reports that Jabbar had previously faced accusations of engaging in some of the
behavior he condemns in the recordings, including drunk-driving and spousal
abuse, a statement from the Council on American-Islamic Relations on Thursday
said: “His crime is the latest example of why cruel, merciless, bottom-feeding
extremist groups have been rejected by the overwhelming majority of the Muslim
world – from Islamic scholars, to mosques, to organizations and to individual
Muslims.”
“We strongly
denounce this crime, [and] we stand in solidarity with the people of New
Orleans,” said the organization, calling on people who could help investigators
capture any potential accomplices of Jabbar to come forward.
Nonetheless,
the recordings appear to answer one early question about Jabbar: how long he
had been radicalized without being detected. The audio establishes that Jabbar
was openly detailing extremist religious views by about February 2024, though
relatively few observers had taken note, with the recordings collectively
garnering fewer than 300 listens as of Thursday morning. The account had two
followers while following various Muslim-related accounts on the platform.
The longest
recording centers on Jabbar’s interpreting scripture to mean that “poetry, like
rapping” could gradually lure people “into the things that God has made
forbidden to us: the intoxicants like marijuana, alcohol, sedatives, opioids,
stimulants and others”.
“Then
there’s the way that music entices us to illicit sex, vulgarity, violence,
betrayal, arrogance, burglary, cheating, ingratitude to our spouses or others
in general,” he continued. Suggesting music was “Satan’s voice,” he added: “It
drives us to waste our wealth, sever the ties to kinship – and even idolatry by
calling us to worship … the artist themselves.”
The
42-year-old who most recently lived in Houston would go on to blame one rap
song in particular for a spate of three murders that occurred in his
neighborhood shortly after its release in the early 2000s. He also said he
believed scripture commanded people to “forbid evil”.
“In fact,
Allah commands Satan to incite mankind with his voice and assault them with his
soldiers and become a partner,” Jabbar, a US-born citizen and army veteran who
served in Afghanistan, remarked. “Forbidding … evil is a mandate on all of
mankind.”
Jabbar on
another recording asserts that “Allah … says, ‘Save those who believe and do
righteous deeds … These will have the good tidings of paradise with all its
gifts and pleasures, without there ever being a break in them.”
Jabbar’s
rhetoric would later escalate dramatically. Joe Biden said the FBI told him and
his White House aides that agents found, “mere hours before the attack”, that
Jabbar had “posted videos on social media indicating that he was inspired by
IS, expressing a desire to kill”.
CNN reported
speaking with two officials who had been briefed on the videos. On them, Jabbar
referred to a divorce and plans to gather his family under the guise of a
celebration before killing them.
But Jabbar
reportedly said he later had dreams about why he should join IS before
ultimately changing his plans and becoming part of the terrorist group, said
CNN. The network added that it had not independently reviewed the videos but
understood they were taken while Jabbar drove at night.
Punchbowl
News on Thursday reported that Jabbar published five videos on Facebook on the
morning before the attack in New Orleans, according to a briefing given to
certain US House and Senate members. Citing a source who was briefed,
Punchbowl’s congressional reporter Mica Soellner wrote on X: “In the first
[video], he explained his subscription to ISIS ideology and the second he
‘provided his will’.”
Jabbar had
complained in court filings that one of his two divorces was making it
difficult for him to pay his house note. Among other legal problems were a
drunk-driving conviction and a restraining order obtained by an ex-wife who
alleged he was abusive, which was first reported by TMZ.
On
Wednesday, after renting a pickup and mounting an IS flag in the back, Jabbar
steered around a police blockade at the foot of Bourbon Street and slammed into
New Year’s revelers celebrating in a city synonymous with jazz and rap music
and raucous celebrations such as Mardi Gras. He also fired a rifle at the crowd
in New Orleans’ historic French Quarter and at police – while clad in body
armor and a helmet. He wounded two officers who confronted him before being
shot dead by police.
Authorities
said Jabbar killed 14 victims while injuring about 35 more. Many of the victims
were either from the New Orleans area or nearby Mississippi. But there were
also residents of other states and citizens of other countries, including
Mexico and Israel, according to information released so far by various
officials.
At a
Thursday news briefing, an FBI official said investigators suspected Jabbar was
solely responsible for the previous day’s killings. Authorities spent Wednesday
searching for possible accomplices after finding a number of improvised
explosive devices left near the site of the attack. Two were wired for remote
detonation, with a corresponding remote control found in Jabbar’s truck.
A short-term
rental home where Jabbar stayed had later also been found intentionally lit on
fire about two miles away from the attack.
Local and
state leaders generally conveyed a need to demonstrate resilience – along with
compassion for victims and their families in the wake of the attack – as they
embarked on plans for a return to normalcy on Thursday.
“Remember
there is no making sense of evil,” New Orleans city council member Oliver
Thomas said in a statement. “Our focus needs to be on prayers and support for
everyone involved.”
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