Shamsud-Din Jabbar, the 42-year-old Islamic State terrorist responsible for a New Year’s Day rampage in New Orleans, Louisiana, conducted online searches about the car used in a German Christmas market attack just days beforehand, according to the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). Jabbar researched previous shootings in New Orleans, Mardi Gras celebrations in the city, and how to access a balcony on Bourbon Street, a popular tourist spot that overlooks Mardi Gras.
Jabbar had planned his attack meticulously, placing a transmitter in a truck with the intent to detonate two bombs. The FBI’s latest report details how he became increasingly zealous in his Islamic faith from 2022, and how he executed his attack by driving a rented truck into crowds celebrating in the French Quarter on New Year’s Day. His actions resulted in 14 deaths and injured 57 individuals.
Imams at Jabbar’s mosque reportedly have a history of anti-Semitic extremism, likening Jews to parasites and suggesting Allah has turned them into animals, including monkeys and pigs. Jabbar is known to have visited Egypt and Canada in recent years.
A military veteran, Jabbar previously served in Afghanistan around the same time as Matthew Livelsberger, who blew up a Cybertruck outside the Trump International Hotel in Las Vegas, Nevada, on New Year’s Day. Both men were based at Fort Bragg. However, as of the time of publication, there is no proven connection between the two.