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New Orleans attacker posted videos declaring support for ISIS shortly before rampage, FBI says


The investigation into the truck attack on New Orleans’ Bourbon Street continued Thursday after a driver plowed into a crowd of New Year’s Day revelers, killing at least 14 people and injuring dozens more. The attacker posted videos declaring his support for ISIS shortly before the deadly rampage, the FBI said Thursday.   

The driver of the truck, who was shot and killed by police moments after he drove into the crowd, was identified as Shamsud-Din Jabbar, a 42-year-old U.S. citizen from Texas. He had previously served in the U.S. military, including an 11-month deployment to Afghanistan, according to an Army spokesperson. He was discharged in 2015 and worked in real estate in recent years. His most recent address was in Houston. 

The FBI initially said that 15 people, excluding the driver, died in the attack. The number was revised by the New Orleans coroner’s office on Thursday to say that the figure included the attacker.  

Investigators are continuing to search for a motive. Officials repeatedly said on Wednesday and Thursday that they thought Jabbar may have had help with the attack, but a U.S. official with the investigation told CBS News late Thursday morning that the FBI now believes there were no accomplices. 

“At this point, currently, and this is another fact I want to be clear on, we do not assess at this point that anyone else is involved in this attack except Shamsud-Din Jabbar,” deputy assistant director of the FBI’s counterintelligence division Christopher Raia said in a news conference on Thursday. 

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A file photo provided by the FBI shows Shamsud-Din Jabbar. In the background, police vehicles at the scene of the truck ramming attack on New Orleans’ Bourbon Street on Jan. 1, 2025.

Jabbar photo provided by FBI; Background photo: Stephen Lew-Imagn Images/Getty Images


Jabbar had rented a Ford electric pickup truck from the peer-to-peer rental app Turo. Raia said Jabbar picked up the car in Houston on Dec. 30, 2024, and drove to New Orleans on Dec. 31. Raia said the attacker had posted five videos while driving between the two cities. President Biden referenced the videos in televised remarks Wednesday evening. In the videos, the man proclaimed his support for ISIS and said he had joined the terror organization before this summer, Raia said. 

In one of those videos, he said that he had planned to attack family and friends, but “was concerned the news headlines would not focus on the quote, ‘war between the believers and the disbelievers,’ end quote,” Raia said. 

Early Wednesday morning, just hours after New Orleans had rung in 2025, authorities say Jabbar drove onto the sidewalk of Bourbon Street, swerving around barriers, to drive into a crowd of revelers. He then got out of the car and began firing at police officers. He died after exchanging gunfire with three responding officers, the FBI said. The New Orleans Police Department said he was struck by police fire and declared dead at the scene. 

Raia said it’s not clear why Jabbar decided to attack Bourbon Street, but said he was “100% inspired by ISIS” and said the investigation into his motive for the attack was ongoing. 

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Map shows the trajectory of the vehicle before it plowed into a crowd on Bourbon Street in New Orleans’ famous French Quarter on New Year’s Day.

Google Earth/CBS News


There have been many conflicting reports of improvised explosive devices, or IEDs, found at the scene and in the French Quarter. Raia said that two devices were found in the French Quarter. Both devices were active and were found in coolers near intersections in the area. Both were “rendered safe” where they were found, Raia said. Surveillance footage showed Jabbar placing the devices where they were found, Raia said.

Raia said that investigators found two other items of interest that were determined not to be IEDs. He said there have been reports of other devices, but said those reports are misinformation or were for non-functioning devices. 

“We do not believe the public is in any danger around any of these locations,” Raia said. 

A long gun with a suppressive device acting as a silencer was also found in the vehicle, law enforcement sources said, and the man was wearing body armor. A law enforcement source with knowledge of the investigation told CBS News that a handgun was also found at the scene, and investigators are looking into whether Jabbar illegally acquired the weapons. 

Investigators have recovered three phones and two laptops, Raia said. Those devices are being reviewed, he said. Evidence technicians will also continue to go over the truck, Raia said. He said investigators have also conducted “hundreds of interviews” in relation with the attack. 

“There’s nothing to indicate through call records, through anything on those devices, through interviews, through anything in our systems, that he was aided in this attack by anybody,” Raia said. 

Raia said Bourbon Street has been released as a crime scene. New Orleans mayor LaToya Cantrell said the city wants to have the street open again to pedestrians by the start of the Sugar Bowl game, which was scheduled for Wednesday evening and postponed to Thursday afternoon following the attack.  

Raia also said that “at this point, there is no definitive link between the attack here in New Orleans and the one in Las Vegas,” where a Tesla Cybertruck exploded outside of the Trump Towers hotel Wednesday morning. 

Both attacks used vehicles rented through Turo, and both attacks involved U.S.-born military servicemen who had served in Afghanistan around the same time, though two U.S. officials told CBS News that they have found no overlap between the two men. Turo said in a statement Wednesday that they believe neither renter “had a criminal background that would have identified them as a security threat.” 



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