FBI investigating ‘act of terrorism’ in New Orleans truck attack; suspect identified

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- A 42-year-old Texas man

crashed a pickup truck into a crowd

celebrating New Year’s Day in New Orleans’ French Quarter and then opened fire on police, killing at least 15 people and injuring 35, in an early morning attack the FBI said was a potential act of terrorism.

The suspect, identified by the Federal Bureau of Investigation as Shamsud-Din Jabbar, a US citizen from Texas, died at the scene in the shoot-out with police, officials said.

“An ISIS flag was located in the vehicle and the FBI is working to determine the subject’s potential associations and affiliations with terrorist organisations,” the FBI said in a statement.

Investigators found weapons and a potential explosive device in the vehicle, and other potential explosive devices were found in the French Quarter, the FBI said. It said the vehicle appeared to have been rented.

An ISIS flag was located in the white pickup truck driven by the suspect, according to the FBI.

PHOTO: X/DC_DRAINO

One city leader described the assailant as being in full military gear.

US Representative Troy Carter told ABC News the death toll may have risen to 15, but that detail was not immediately confirmed by law enforcement officials.

“This man was trying to run over as many people as he could,” police chief Anne Kirkpatrick said at a televised press conference on Jan 1. “He was hell-bent on creating the carnage and the damage that he did.”

The incident occurred at 3.15am (5.15pm in Singapore) near the intersection of Canal and Bourbon streets, a historic tourist destination in the city’s French Quarter known for attracting large crowds with its music and bars.

Ms Kirkpatrick said the driver, who swerved around barricades, shot and wounded two police officers from the vehicle after it crashed. The officers were in stable condition, she added.

“We know the perpetrator has been killed,” said New Orleans city councilman Oliver Thomas. “As we search for a motive, remember there is no making sense of evil.”

More than 300 officers were on duty at the time of the incident, police said.

The city hosts the Sugar Bowl, a classic American college football game, each New Year’s Day. Local media including Nola.com and WDSU television reported the Sugar Bowl would be postponed, citing unnamed sources.

The Sugar Bowl committee was less definitive in a statement, saying, “We are in ongoing discussions with authorities on the local, state, and federal levels and will communicate further details as they become available.”

The city will also be the site of the NFL Super Bowl on Feb 9.

New Orleans’ Mayor LaToya Cantrell called the incident a terrorist attack.

“This is a fluid situation, and we are in coordination with numerous local and federal law enforcement agencies to ensure a complete and thorough investigation to bring those who may have been part of this incident to justice,” Louisiana Governor Jeff Landry said on X.

NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA - JANUARY 01: Police and fire trucks are seen outside a house fire on Mandeville Street that may be connected to the mass casualty Bourbon Street attack where at least ten people were killed when a person allegedly drove into the crowd in the early morning hours of New Year’s Day on January 1, 2025 in New Orleans, Louisiana. Dozens more were injured after a suspect in a rented pickup truck allegedly drove around barricades and through a crowd of New Year’s revelers on Bourbon Street. The suspect then got out of the car, opened fire on police officers, and was subsequently killed by law enforcement. Chris Graythen/Getty Images/AFP (Photo by Chris Graythen / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / Getty Images via AFP)

Police and fire trucks are seen outside a house fire on Mandeville Street that may be connected to the mass casualty Bourbon Street attack.

PHOTO: AFP

‘Horrific act’

Verified video taken by an onlooker shows at least two twisted bodies in the street, with one of them lying in what appears to be a puddle of blood. A bystander is seen kneeling over one of the bodies as a group of uniformed military personnel in green uniforms and carrying firearms runs past.

The injured were taken to at least five hospitals, according to Nola Ready, the city’s emergency preparedness department.

A couple told CBS News that they heard crashing noises coming from down the street and then saw a white truck slam through a barricade “at a high rate of speed”.

Mr Zion Parsons, 18, told Nola.com that he and his two friends were leaving a Bourbon Street eatery when they heard a commotion and saw a white car barrelling toward them.

He said he dodged the vehicle, but one of his friends was struck, with her leg “twisted and contorted above and around her back”.

“You can just look and see bodies, just bodies of people, just bleeding, broken bones,” he said.

Louisiana Senator Bill Cassidy said on CNN that despite the attack, law enforcement in New Orleans was ready for the Sugar Bowl on Jan 1 night. In response to vehicle attacks on pedestrian malls around the world, New Orleans was in the process of removing and replacing the steel barriers known as bollards that restrict vehicle traffic in the Bourbon Street pedestrian zone. The project’s status was unclear at the time of the Jan 1 attack.

Construction began in November 2024 and was scheduled to continue through February 2025, according to a city website. In December in Germany, a 50-year-old man was charged with multiple counts of murder and attempted murder after police said he ploughed a car through crowds at a Christmas market in Magdeburg, killing five people and injuring scores.

US President Joe Biden called the city’s mayor to offer full federal support. US President-elect Donald Trump said his incoming administration would help New Orleans as it investigates and recovers from what he called an act of pure evil. REUTERS

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