New Orleans terror attack latest: FBI looking into suspect’s travels to Egypt as British man among 14 killed

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Heartbreaking comparison of New Orleans before and after terror attack

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Investigators are reportedly looking into the travel history of the suspect in the New Orleans attack, which killed 14 people and injured dozens more just hours into the new year.

Shamsud-Din Jabbar, a 42-year-old U.S. citizen from Texas, traveled to Egypt alone for a month in 2023 and told his family he was going “because it was cheap and beautiful,” his half-brother AbdurJabbar told ABC News.

The FBI is looking into Jabbar’s foreign travel, including what he did and who he spoke to during his time in Egypt. The federal agency is also trying to determine whether he became radicalized during his trip, the outlet reported.

Authorities recovered an ISIS flag from inside his vehicle.

“This next most important phase of the investigation is to find out how that radicalization happened and if it happened on that trip,” Orleans Parish District Attorney Jason Williams told the network.

The news comes as authorities identified yet another victim: Edward Pettifer, a 31-year-old British national.

“The entire family are devastated at the tragic news of Ed‘s death in New Orleans. He was a wonderful son, brother, grandson, nephew and a friend to so many,” his family said in a statement.

Homeless man killed in New Orleans attack

Another victim of the New Orleans attack has been identified.

Elliot Wilkinson, 40, of Slidell, Louisiana, was among those killed in the truck massacre.

“He recently got out of prison and had problems with mental illness. He could’ve stayed with me, our sister or mother, but he never wanted to be a burden to the family, so he went back to New Orleans,” his brother told CNN.

“To my little brother Elliot Wilkinson, you was loved and you will truly be missed,” Wilkinson’s brother wrote in a Facebook post obtained by WDSU. “I know life was hard for you at times. But I wasn’t expecting to get the phone call this morning you was one of them that got hit in New Orleans in the French Quarter.”

Josh Marcus4 January 2025 15:30

Terror expert warns New Orleans shows we’re living in ‘perfect storm’ of radicalism

Security officials have their work cut out for them stopping terrorist violence in today’s political and social climate, according to Seamus Hughes, a senior researcher and policy associate with the National Counterterrorism Innovation, Technology, and Education Center at the University of Nebraska Omaha.

“What the FBI and law enforcement in general are dealing with right now is a threat landscape that is both diverse and complicated,” he told NBC News. “That makes things a little harder for law enforcement.”

“We have a level of polarization in the U.S. that’s an important factor,” he added. “The online environment has algorithms that are set up to make you angry. And all that is playing into a perfect storm of factors that are leading to an increase in radicalization.”

Josh Marcus4 January 2025 15:15

Jabbar had bomb-making materials in burned Airbnb

New Orleans attacker Shamsud-Din Jabbar had bomb-making materials and a potential homemade rifle silencer in an Airbnb property in New Orleans, according to federal officials.

Jabbar set the short-term rental on fire to conceal his activities, according to the ATF, using “trategically placed accelerants throughout the house in his effort to destroy it and other evidence of his crime.”

However, the fire went out, and the ATF found “pre-cursors for bomb-making material and a privately made device suspected of being a silencer for a rifle,” the agency said in a statement.

The FBI found similar materials at Jabbar’s home in Houston, Texas.

Josh Marcus4 January 2025 14:55

‘This was the event that I was afraid of’

After the deadly New Olreans attack, local officials are trying to pinpoint whether any security gaps contributed to the tragedy on Bourbon Street.

Attacker Shamsud-Din Jabbar evaded multiple defenses around the busy pedestrian area.

He managed to drive around a police SUV, over a mechanical traffic-stopping wedge that was not deployed, and past the location where a bollard system previously stood but was removed for repairs.

The bollards went up as part of a $40 million security upgrade in the city after a deadly 2016 terror attack in Nice, France.

“Our plan was for this specific event, this was the event that I was afraid of,” former New Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu told NOLA.com. “I thought, ‘S***, that’s going to happen on Bourbon Street.’”

Alex Woodward has more on the city’s preparations.

Josh Marcus4 January 2025 14:37

King ‘deeply saddened’ after stepson of William and Harry’s nanny killed in New Orleans attack

The king has been in touch with the family of Edward Pettifer, 31, who was killed by “blunt force injuries” when a pickup truck rammed into a crowd of New Year’s Eve revellers in Bourbon Street, Louisiana, killing at least 14 and injuring at least 35.

Mr Pettifer, who was named by Metropolitan Police on Saturday morning, is believed to be the stepson of Prince William and Prince Harry’s former nanny, Alexandra Pettifer, who was known as Tiggy.

The 31-year-old’s family described him as a “wonderful son, brother, grandson, nephew and friend to so many”.

Josh Marcus4 January 2025 14:14

Recap: Who were the victims of the New Orleans terror attack

The identities of the 14 innocent victims of the New Orleans terror attack on New Year’s Day are still emerging, as investigators continue to probe the background of attacker as Shamsud-Din Jabbar.

Among the dead were a former Princeton football star, an aspiring nurse, a college freshman, and a devoted mom.

Here is a recap of those who have been identified so far:

Mike Bedigan4 January 2025 13:00

FBI says it has received almost 1,000 tips in 48 hours since New Orleans attack

The FBI says it has received almost 1,000 tips in 48 hours, as it continues to investigate the tragic incident in New Orleans on New Year’s Day, which left 14 people dead and dozens wounded.

“Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) personnel from across the country continue to work diligently to further this investigation and evaluate evidence, interview victims and witnesses, and analyze tips related to the New Orleans Bourbon Street attack,” the bureau said in a statement on Friday.

“Two days into the investigation, the FBI has received almost 1,000 tips, and leads have been sent to FBI Field Offices across the country for investigation.”

Mike Bedigan4 January 2025 11:00

Cybertruck bomber left chilling notes saying U.S. is ‘headed toward collapse’ and explosion was a ‘wake up call’

Matthew Livelsberger, the Green Beret who died in the Las Vegas Cybertruck explosion, left behind a note describing the incident as a “stunt” to serve as a “wake up call” for the country.

The shocking incident occurred just hours after the deadly terror attack in New Orleans in the early hours of New year’s Day. However, on Friday, investigators ruled out a connection between the two incidents.

Mike Bedigan4 January 2025 09:00

How much of a threat does ISIS pose to U.S.?

Shamsud-Din Jabbar, a 42-year-old U.S. Army veteran, has been named by authorities as the suspect. He carried an ISIS flag on the vehicle used to mow down pedestrians.

Addressing the nation following the attack, President Joe Biden said Jabbar posted videos to social media “indicating he was inspired by ISIS, expressing a desire to kill.”

But how much of a threat does the extremist Islamist militant group pose to Americans today?

Mike Bedigan4 January 2025 07:00

‘My anxiety is at an all-time high’: Workers return to Bourbon Street

Authorities removed the remaining bodies and swept blood from the sidewalks and streets beginning at 2 a.m. Thursday. Deliveries to the street’s bars and restaurants resumed a few hours later.

Several blocks of Bourbon and surrounding streets had been blocked off, businesses were closed and residents living in the footprint of an active crime scene were navigating police tape and barricades after a driver plowed a pickup truck into a crowd shortly after 3 a.m. Wednesday.

Thousands of workers — still checking on the safety of friends and colleagues — are now returning to the bars, restaurants, music venues, hotels, gift shops and other businesses that keep the city’s tourism economy running.

Mike Bedigan4 January 2025 05:01

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