Terrorists Strike New Orleans

QueEx

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At least 10 killed in New Orleans after driver

intentionally rams into crowd on Bourbon Street


Jessie Yeung Chris Boyette Holly Yan Tori B. Powell Eric Levenson

By Jessie Yeung, Chris Boyette, Andy Rose, Holly Yan,
Tori B. Powell and Eric Levenson, CNN
Updated 3:21 PM EST, Wed January 1, 2025



• At least 10 people were killed and 35 injured when a driver rammed a pickup truck into a crowd during New Year’s celebrations on Bourbon Street in New Orleans early on Wednesday morning. The FBI is investigating it as an “act of terrorism.”

• The FBI has identified the suspect as a 42-year-old Texas man and Army veteran. Law enforcement sources say the suspect, who was killed in a firefight with officers, had an ISIS flag at the time of the attack. The FBI said it is investigating potential associations with terrorist organizations.

• The FBI said it doesn’t think the driver was “solely responsible.” Weapons, as well as “potential improvised explosive devices,” otherwise known as IEDs, were found in the vehicle, the FBI said. Officials also located IEDs in the French Quarter.

• The attack in the popular French Quarter happened less than a mile from where The Sugar Bowl was to be hosted Wednesday. The annual college football game was postponed for 24 hours for public safety reasons, the bowl’s CEO said.
 

QueEx

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33 min ago

Police chief on malfunctioning barricades:

"We did indeed have a plan,

but the terrorist defeated it"

From CNN's Eric Levenson
Anne E. Kirkpatrick, New Orleans Police Department Superintendent, speaks at a press conference in New Orleans on January 1.

Anne E. Kirkpatrick, New Orleans Police Department Superintendent, speaks at a press conference in New Orleans on January 1.
WDSU


New Orleans officials said mechanical barricades that had been installed around Bourbon Street were not functioning and were being repaired ahead of the Super Bowl in February.

In their place, police cars and other barriers were placed at parts of Bourbon Street, but the attacker drove onto the sidewalk to evade the barriers and slammed into crowds of people.

“This particular terrorist drove around onto the sidewalk and got around the hard target. We did have a car there, we had barriers there, we had officers there, and they still got around,” Police Superintendent Anne Kirkpatrick said at a news conference Wednesday.

She said police were aware the mechanical barricades, which she called “wedges,” did not work as intended and sometimes got stuck.

“We knew these were malfunctioning. So we did indeed have a plan, but the terrorist defeated it,” she added.

What we know: The steel barricades were installed in 2017 in the wake of the 2016 truck ramming attack in Nice, France, and various drunken driving crashes on Bourbon Street over the years. The barricades can be set in a flat or raised position to allow or prevent vehicles from entering the area.



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QueEx

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Super Moderator
2 hr 43 min ago

FBI identifies Texas man Shamsud-Din Jabbar​

as suspect and says other potential explosives found

From CNN’s Holmes Lybrand and Josh Campbell

The FBI has identified the suspect in Wednesday’s deadly crowd attack in New Orleans as 42-year-old Shamsud-Din Jabbar of Texas.
According to an FBI statement, other potential explosive devices were found in the French Quarter separate from where the man rammed into a crowd, killing at least 10 people and injuring dozens. FBI bomb technicians are working to determine whether any of the devices are viable.

The agency confirmed an ISIS flag was found in the vehicle and “is working to determine the subject’s potential associations and affiliations with terrorist organizations.”

The FBI is asking anyone with information or video of the incident to submit them to fbi.gov/bourbonstreetattack or to call 1-800-CALL-FBI.


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I have been on BGOL complaining about the various forms of terrorism on the streets or highway using vehicles. It is going to be interesting seeing how they are going to play this off as an uncivilized act of Islam when it is something they use all the time. I had a white jihadist try to ram his car into me, a suicide mission.
 
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QueEx

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Super Moderator
I have been on BGOL complaining about the various forms of terrorism on the streets or highway using vehicles. It is going to be interesting seeing how they are going to play this off as an uncivilized act of Islam when it is something they use all the time. I had a white jihadist try to ram his car into me, a suicide mission.

Is the evidence pointing someplace else ? ? ?

If so, lay it out . . .


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QueEx

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Super Moderator

Sugar Bowl: Georgia and Notre Dame prepare for rescheduled playoff quarterfinal following New Orleans terror attack​


By Jamie Barton, CNN
4 minute read
Published 12:59 PM EST, Thu January 2, 2025


New Orleans Police Superintendent Anne Kirkpatrick announced Thursday that there would be an increased police presence for the game.

New Orleans Police Superintendent Anne Kirkpatrick announced Thursday that there would be an increased police presence for the game.
Chris Graythen/Getty Images

CNN —

The final game of the College Football Playoff quarterfinals –between Georgia and Notre Dame – is here, with the chance to face Penn State in the Orange Bowl on January 9 up for grabs.

The mood, however, is somber in New Orleans, with the city in mourning after 14 people were killed and dozens injured when a driver rammed a pickup truck into a crowd during New Year’s celebrations early Wednesday morning on Bourbon Street, less than a mile from the Caesars Superdome, where the game will take place. The attacker is also dead.

The game, originally due to kick off at 8:45 p.m. ET on Wednesday, was subsequently postponed and now has a new start time of 4 p.m. ET on Thursday.

A moment of silence honoring the victims of the attack will be held before the start of the game, a Sugar Bowl spokesperson told CNN. The moment is set to happen before the playing of the National Anthem.

While the victims and their families remain in the hearts of players, coaches and officials, those involved in the game are remaining focused on the task on the field.



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QueEx

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14 victims dead, 35 hurt as FBI puts call
out for tips in terror attack investigation


WDSU logo

Updated: 6:16 AM CST Jan 3, 2025
Infinite Scroll Enabled

Erin Lowrey

At least 14 people are dead and 35 people were injured after a man drove a truck into a crowd at Bourbon and Canal streets in New Orleans on New Year's Day in a terrorist attack, according to the FBI.

It happened around 3:15 a.m. toward the end of New Year’s celebrations in New Orleans and hours before the expected kickoff of the Allstate Sugar Bowl, a college football quarterfinal held in the city’s Caesars Superdome.

The FBI confirmed the identity of the suspected driver of the truck as Shamsud Din Jabbar, 42, of Texas. A new photo of Jabbar was released early Thursday morning:

(Photo by -/FBI/AFP via Getty Images)

FBI

The FBI confirmed that despite previous reports, investigators believe Jabbar acted alone in the attack.

According to the FBI, Jabbar drove to New Orleans on Dec. 31 and posted on Facebook his support for ISIS.

Jabbar said he joined ISIS before the summer and had originally planned to kill his family.

According to the FBI, Jabbar felt that killing his family "would not focus on the war between the believers and disbelievers."

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Play Video
The FBI said Jabbar was seen on video placing two IEDs in coolers in the New Orleans French Quarter around 2:03 a.m.

Surveillance images obtained by the FBI show Jabbar walking down Dauphine Street near Governor Nicholls Street before placing the coolers with the IEDs at the intersection of Bourbon and Orleans and Bourbon and Toulouse.


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Fans flock to Sugar Bowl in New Orleans after deadly New Year's attack​


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Fans from two US universities filled a stadium in New Orleans for a highly anticipated American football game as the city reels from a New Year's Day attack.
The annual Sugar Bowl, which was scheduled to take place Wednesday, was postponed to Thursday at 15:00 local time (21:00 GMT) after a Texas man drove through a crowded New Orleans street, killing 14 people.

People gathered in the stadium partook in a moment of silence to remember the victims of Wednesday's attack.

The game brought thousands of fans to the city to see the University of Notre Dame take on the University of Georgia at the 70,000-seat Caesars Superdome.

Notre Dame's "Fighting Irish" ultimately emerged the winner, beating the Georgia Bulldogs 23-10.

Ahead of the game's start, Bourbon Street - where the attack took place on Wednesday - reopened to the public for the first time since the deadly event.
Yellow barriers, designed to prevent cars from driving onto the pavement, lined both sides of the street.

Fourteen flowers were laid against a wall at the spot where the attacker first drove into a crowd.

Many who trickled in had come to have a few drinks before heading over to the stadium for the game, with almost everyone wearing red for Georgia, and green or blue and gold for Notre Dame.

As the street reopened, a fan of the Notre Dame college football team yelled: "Go fighting Irish! We love life! So let's live!"

A New Orleans man who was discharged from the hospital on Thursday afternoon after being caught up in the attack, headed straight back to Bourbon Street dressed in the same clothes he was wearing on 1 January.

Speaking to the BBC, Jovon Miguel Bell lifted his shirt to show cuts and bruises across his torso, which he said were the result of getting trampled.
"I'm blessed, to be honest. God is good," he said. "Blessings to the victims and their families."

Mr Bell admitted he was "drunk as hell" at the time of the attack, but does vaguely remember what landed him in hospital.

"I'm walking down the street and I hear the screams. Ruckus. Chaos," he said. "As soon as I turn around, I got hit [by a person] and fall to the ground. I got stepped on, multiple times."

Now free from hospital, he headed straight back to the bars of Bourbon Street as the Sugar Bowl game was ongoing, where he said he felt lucky he escaped with minor injuries.

Ahead of the game, state authorities assured the public that the city had taken additional safety precautions.
Brian Williams, a Georgia supporter, told the BBC that "the bad guys would have won" if the game had been cancelled or further postponed after the attack.

"Nowhere will be safer than New Orleans now," he said, as he gestured at a small group of state troopers on Bourbon Street. "There's nothing to worry about."

Like other football fans in town for the game, Mr Williams said the mood was sombre when he arrived in town early Wednesday.

"It felt off. It felt weird to be out in town, and we couldn't even get to Bourbon Street," Mr Williams said. "But this place will be back to normal soon."
Master P, a New Orleans native and rap singer whose full name is Percy Robert Miller, visited Bourbon Street on Thursday to reassure local resident he would do whatever he could to help the city recover.

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"We've got to show the people we're not stopping. We are going to move on," he said. "Even this evil stuff that came against us is not going to stop us."

Mr Miller described the city as one where people come to "celebrate" and described it as "our culture".

Jefferson County Sheriff Joseph Lopinto told reporters Thursday the college football match would be secure for fans who have come to the city.

"It's probably going to be one of the safest places in the country," Mr Lopinto said. "If my kid wanted to come to the game, I'd have no problem."

As the sun set over Bourbon Street on Thursday, many locals said they were confident that the vibrant area would bounce back quickly after the attack.

Among them was Darnell Simmons, a 23-year-old member of a brass band playing at the Bourbon House Oyster bar.

"A terrible thing happened here," he said. "But we're back, we're here to remember those we lost."

The bar's owner, Dickie Brennan, said he felt "incredibly emotional" to hear music return to Bourbon Street.

"We overcame Katrina. God knows how many hurricanes, oil spills, crime," he added, referring to the 2005 hurricane that left more than 1,300 dead. "One guy will not stop this beautiful city and special neighbourhood."

"This city is resilient. We have to be."

Just after 3:00 local time on 1 January officials say 42-year-old army veteran, Shamsud-Din Jabbar, killed 14 people and wounded dozens more when he drove a pick-up truck into crowds for the New Years holiday.

"We've got to show the people we're not stopping. We are going to move on," he said. "Even this evil stuff that came against us is not going to stop us."

Mr Miller described the city as one where people come to "celebrate" and described it as "our culture".

Jefferson County Sheriff Joseph Lopinto told reporters Thursday the college football match would be secure for fans who have come to the city.

"It's probably going to be one of the safest places in the country," Mr Lopinto said. "If my kid wanted to come to the game, I'd have no problem."

As the sun set over Bourbon Street on Thursday, many locals said they were confident that the vibrant area would bounce back quickly after the attack.

Among them was Darnell Simmons, a 23-year-old member of a brass band playing at the Bourbon House Oyster bar.

"A terrible thing happened here," he said. "But we're back, we're here to remember those we lost."

The bar's owner, Dickie Brennan, said he felt "incredibly emotional" to hear music return to Bourbon Street.

"We overcame Katrina. God knows how many hurricanes, oil spills, crime," he added, referring to the 2005 hurricane that left more than 1,300 dead. "One guy will not stop this beautiful city and special neighbourhood."

"This city is resilient. We have to be."

Just after 3:00 local time on 1 January officials say 42-year-old army veteran, Shamsud-Din Jabbar, killed 14 people and wounded dozens more when he drove a pick-up truck into crowds for the New Years holiday.

Before Jabbar was killed in a shoot-out with police during the attack, he had proclaimed his allegiance to the Islamic State group in videos uploaded to social media, according to the FBI.

The Sugar Bowl is watched by millions of Americans every year, traditionally on New Year's Day.

The game, along with the Los Angeles Rose Bowl, is a big tourist draw for the city.

The Sugar Bowl dates back to 1935, playing host to many of the best coaches, players and teams in college football history.

The Super Bowl, America's biggest sporting event, is scheduled for 9 February at the same New Orleans venue as the Sugar Bowl.
Before Jabbar was killed in a shoot-out with police during the attack, he had proclaimed his allegiance to the Islamic State group in videos uploaded to social media, according to the FBI.

The Sugar Bowl is watched by millions of Americans every year, traditionally on New Year's Day.

The game, along with the Los Angeles Rose Bowl, is a big tourist draw for the city.

The Sugar Bowl dates back to 1935, playing host to many of the best coaches, players and teams in college football history.

The Super Bowl, America's biggest sporting event, is scheduled for 9 February at the same New Orleans venue as the Sugar Bowl.
 

QueEx

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FBI: New Orleans attacker recorded area using Meta smart glasses weeks before attack

FBI officials said the man behind the deadly New Year's Day attack in New Orleans had visited the city twice in late 2024 and recorded the Bourbon Street area using Meta smart glasses. NBC News' Kathy Park reports on the other new details the FBI released.



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