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Portrait emerges of Shamsud-Din Jabbar, accused of New Orleans attack
Maya Yang
Military records and media interviews are painting a clearer portrait of Shamsud-Din Jabbar, the 42-year-old Texas man accused of crashing a truck into New Year’s Day revelers in New Orleans, killing at least 14 people.
Jabbar served in the US army for 13 years, including a deployment to Afghanistan. On Thursday, the FBI said investigators believe Jabbar acted alone when he attacked the busy intersection of Bourbon and Canal streets. Officials had earlier said they believed Jabbar had accomplices.
The FBI has said Jabbar had a flag of Islamic State, the Sunni Muslim militant group, on his truck and the bureau is treating the attack as an act of terrorism.
The FBI also announced that it had found no definitive link between the New Orleans attack and the explosion that occurred later on Wednesday outside a hotel owned by Donald Trump in Las Vegas.
Jabbar appears to have been born and raised in Beaumont, Texas.
He served in the army as a human resource specialist and information technology specialist from 2007 until 2015, according to an army official, and deployed to Afghanistan from February 2009 to January 2010.
He joined the army reserve as an IT specialist until 2020, holding the rank of staff sergeant at the end of service, according to the army official.
In addition to serving in the army, Jabbar had previously enlisted in the navy in August 2004 under a delayed entry program but was discharged a month later, a navy official told Reuters.
Jabbar graduated with a computer information systems degree from Georgia State University after studying there from 2015 to 2017, school officials told Atlanta News First.
Anna Betts
The victims of the New Year’s Day attack in New Orleans make up a tragic but vivid tapestry of the characteristically cosmopolitan crowd that descends on the city’s famous French Quarter to celebrate any occasion.
Authorities have not yet released the names of those killed in the suspected terrorist attack, which killed at least 14 people and injured dozens more, but details have emerged as family members and friends speak out.
Local media in New Orleans first identified Nikyra Cheyenne Dedeaux, 18, who had traveled to the city from nearby Gulfport, Mississippi, with a cousin and a friend; Reggie Hunter, a 37-year-old father of two from Baton Rouge, Louisiana; and Tiger Bech, a Lafayette, Louisiana, native and former football player in his late 20s.
A fourth victim was named as Nicole Perez, a 28-year-old mother and delicatessen manager from Metairie, Louisiana, who was celebrating the new year with friends. Hubert Gauthreaux, 21, and Kareem Badawi, 18, were identified as victims by their former high schools and by their families.
Also killed was Matthew Tenedorio, 25, an audiovisual technician who had gone out with friends, according to his family, and Billy DiMaio, 25, a New York-based account executive who had travelled to New Orleans to celebrate the new year with friends.
As their deaths were confirmed, families and loved ones from across the US honored those killed.
You can read the full piece by Anna Betts, Marina Dunbar and Ramon Antonio Vargas in New Orleans below:
Opening summary
This is the Guardian’s latest blog on the developments after the deadly truck attack in New Orleans during the early hours of New Year’s Day.
Authorities are continuing to investigate the path to radicalization of the suspect, Shamsud-Din Jabbar, a 42-year-old Texas native who once served in Afghanistan.
The FBI now says it believes he acted alone and at present there does not appear to be a link with the explosion of a Tesla Cybertruck outside a hotel owned by US president-elect Donald Trump in Las Vegas.
The Cybertruck driver has been identified as Matthew Livelsberger, an active-duty Army soldier from Colorado Springs, and police said he acted alone. Livelsberger killed himself with a gunshot, police said, and was inside the vehicle when gasoline canisters and large firework mortars in the truck bed exploded.
While the attacks have not been linked, the military ties of the two men will be an area of concern for investigators.
There will also be questions over whether more should have been done to protect revellers in the Bourbon Street area of New Orleans as it emerged that many of the bollards designed to stop vehicle attacks were not operational. You can read more here: