The explosion outside the Trump International Hotel in Las Vegas has been attributed to Army veteran Matthew Livelsberger, 37, according to law enforcement sources. Livelsberger allegedly orchestrated the detonation of a Tesla Cybertruck, rented via the Turo app.
Livelsberger served in the Army for over 19 years, primarily with Special Forces, before assuming a civilian role as a Remote and Autonomous Systems Manager. The FBI raided a Colorado Springs townhouse connected to Livelsberger as part of their investigation.
The Green Beret veteran, who grew up in Ohio, has lived in Colorado Springs and was linked to various city addresses. Officials suspect Livelsberger drove the rented Cybertruck into Nevada on the attack morning, charging it along the way. Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Sheriff Kevin McMahill reported that it arrived at around 7:30 a.m., with the explosion occurring shortly after.
Livelsberger and Shamsud Din Jabbar, who killed at least 15 people in New Orleans, both used electric vehicles rented from the Turo app. Both also served at Fort Bragg, the same base, with nearly 60,000 people, that would-be Trump assassin Ryan Routh visited over 100 times.
The explosion in Vegas resulted in Livelsberger’s death, with the Tesla Cybertruck’s design helping to contain the blast.
Social media commenters have queried how a special forces operator would be unable to identify these weaknesses in his own plan, if he indeed intended to harm more people than he did.
Turo released a statement expressing their cooperation with law enforcement, noting no criminal backgrounds for the renters involved.