New Orleans attack: FBI says suspect acted alone and there appears to be no link to Las Vegas Cybertruck explosion

Suspect Shamsud-Din Jabbar joined Islamic State terror group last summer, investigators say

New Orleans attack: A barrier is seen on Royal Street after a vehicle drove into a crowd on New Orleans’ Canal and Bourbon streets. Photograph: George Walker IV/AP
New Orleans attack: A barrier is seen on Royal Street after a vehicle drove into a crowd on New Orleans’ Canal and Bourbon streets. Photograph: George Walker IV/AP

A US army veteran who drove a truck into a crowd of New Year’s Day revellers had pledged allegiance to the Islamic State terror group, but acted alone in the attack that killed at least 14 people, the FBI said on Thursday.

The suspect, who was shot dead at the scene after firing at police, has been identified as Shamsud-Din Jabbar, a 42-year-old Texan who once served in Afghanistan. He drove from Houston to New Orleans on December 31st, and posted five videos on Facebook between 1.29am and 3.02am on the morning of the attack in which he said he supported Islamic State, the Islamist militant group with fighters in Iraq and Syria, the FBI said.

In the first video, Jabbar said he had previously planned to harm his family and friends, but was concerned that the media coverage would not focus on the “war between the believers and the disbelievers”, FBI deputy assistant director Christopher Raia said at a press conference.

Jabbar also said in the videos that he had joined Islamic State, also known as Isis, before last summer and had provided his last will and testament, Mr Raia said.

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“This was an act of terrorism,” Mr Raia said. “It was premeditated and an evil act.”

US citizen Shamsud-Din Bahar Jabbar has been named by the FBI as the suspected terrorist attacker in New Orleans. Photographs: Chris Graythen/Getty/Passport image supplied by FBI via AP
US citizen Shamsud-Din Bahar Jabbar has been named by the FBI as the suspected terrorist attacker in New Orleans. Photographs: Chris Graythen/Getty/Passport image supplied by FBI via AP

New Orleans officials said the Sugar Bowl college football game that had been scheduled for Wednesday in a New Year’s Day tradition would take place on Thursday afternoon. The city is also to also host the National Football League’s Super Bowl next month.

The FBI said there appeared to be no link between the attack in New Orleans and the episode in Las Vegas on the same day in which a Tesla Cybertruck packed with petrol canisters and large firework mortars exploded in flames outside the Trump International Hotel in Las Vegas, just weeks before president-elect Donald Trump returns to the White House on January 20th.

The injured victims in the New Orleans attack included two police officers wounded by gunfire from the suspect, just three hours into the new year on Bourbon Street in the historic French Quarter. At least 14 people were killed, including the suspect, the FBI said. Among the victims were the mother of a four-year-old who had just moved into a new apartment after getting a promotion at work, a New York financial employee and accomplished student-athlete who was visiting home for the holidays, and an 18-year-old aspiring nurse from Mississippi.

Who was Shamsud-Din Jabbar, the suspect in New Orleans truck attack?Opens in new window ]

Witnesses described a horrifying scene.

“There were people everywhere,” Kimberly Strickland of Mobile, Alabama, said in an interview. “You just heard this squeal and the rev of the engine and this huge loud impact and then the people screaming and debris – just metal – the sound of crunching metal and bodies.”

Authorities in other US cities said they had boosted security, including at Trump Tower and Times Square in New York City, adding that there were no immediate threats. In Washington, police also said they had increased their presence as the capital prepared to host three major events this month: Congress’s January 6th certification of US president-elect Donald Trump’s election win, the January 9th state funeral for former president Jimmy Carter, and Mr Trump’s inauguration on January 20th.

‘I heard the pops and I just ran’: New Orleans in shock after vehicle attackOpens in new window ]

The FBI said an Islamic State flag was found on the trailer hitch of the rented vehicle involved in the New Orleans attack.

US president Joe Biden condemned what he called a “despicable” act.

Public records showed Jabbar worked in property in Houston. In a promotional video posted four years ago, he described himself as born and raised in Beaumont, a city about 130km east of Houston.

Jabbar was in the regular US army from March 2007 until January 2015 and then in the army reserve from January 2015 until July 2020, an army spokesperson said. He deployed to Afghanistan from February 2009 to January 2010 and held the rank of staff sergeant at the end of his service.

Islamic State is a Muslim militant group that once imposed a reign of terror over millions of people in Iraq and Syria until it collapsed in the region following a sustained military campaign by a US-led coalition. Even as it has been weakened in the field, it has continued to recruit sympathisers online, experts say. – Reuters