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THE New Orleans terrorist made plans to slay his family but instead chose to kill innocent strangers so the world would focus on his attack on "non-believers."

US Army veteran Shamsud-Din Jabbar rammed his pickup truck through a crowd of New Year's Day revelers - killing 14 people and injuring dozens more.

Shamsud-Din Jabbar proclaimed his support for ISIS months before the deadly New Year's Day rampage in New Orleans
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Shamsud-Din Jabbar proclaimed his support for ISIS months before the deadly New Year's Day rampage in New OrleansCredit: Reuters
Jabbar hung an ISIS flag on the back of the Ford F-150 he rented in Houston on December 30
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Jabbar hung an ISIS flag on the back of the Ford F-150 he rented in Houston on December 30Credit: AP
Surveillance footage shows Shamsud-Din Jabbar an hour before the attack
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Surveillance footage shows Shamsud-Din Jabbar an hour before the attackCredit: AP
Shamsud-Din Jabbar is seen in a still image from surveillance video walking along Dauphine Street in New Orleans early January 1, 2025
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Shamsud-Din Jabbar is seen in a still image from surveillance video walking along Dauphine Street in New Orleans early January 1, 2025Credit: Reuters

He was killed during a heated exchange of fire with the cops after the attack.

The FBI revealed that former sergeant Jabbar, who was once deployed to Afghanistan, pledged his allegiance to ISIS months before the January 1 attack on ' Bourbon Street.

Hours before the attack, Jabbar posted five videos on  where he proclaimed his support for  as he traveled from  to New Orleans on the evening of December 31.

In the first video, Jabbar, 42, explained how he initially planned to call his family and ex-wife for a "celebration" with plans to kill them together.

read more on the attack

However, he later revealed that he pivoted his attack because he wanted news headlines to focus on the “war between the believers and the disbelievers", said Christopher Raia, the deputy assistant director of the FBI’s Counterterrorism Division.

Jabbar, who Raia stated was 100% inspired by ISIS, said in one of the videos that he had joined the terrorist organization "before the summer".

Raia said the FBI is now confident there are no accomplices, and it's believed Jabbar attacked on his own.

Investigators are still digging into Jabbar's past and what radicalized the  veteran.

Jabbar was a US Army veteran who served for more than 10 years, including a deployment to Afghanistan in 2009.

He studied information technology, recently held a six-figure job and converted to Islam after being brought up Christian.

Minute-by-minute breakdown of New Orleans terror atrocity as vids show truck attack unfold and hero cops rush to scene

A man named Abdur Jabbar in Beaumont, Texas, told The New York Times he was the suspect's brother.

He described Jabbar as “a sweetheart really, a nice guy, a friend, really smart, caring”.

He said Jabber had converted to Islam at a young age, but that “what he did does not represent Islam.

"This is more some type of radicalization, not religion."

Alethea Duncan of the FBI said: “We believe he was honorably discharged, but we are working through this process, figuring out all this information.”

A US Army spokesperson confirmed to ABC that Jabbar served in human resources and information technology roles from 2007 to 2015 in the army, but he was not involved in direct combat.

He then continued as an IT specialist in the Army Reserve from 2015 to 2020, the spokesperson said, and left at the rank of staff sergeant.

Jabbar enlisted in the Navy in August 2024, 5 months before the attack, but did not go to boot camp and was discharged from the program a month later, a Navy spokesperson said.

Jabbar was married twice: first to Nakedra Marsh and then to Shaneen Jabbar from who he was divorced in 2012 and 2020 respectively.

Dwayne Marsh, who is married to Nakedra, said Jabbar had been acting erratically in recent months.

Dwayne said Jabbar was "being all crazy, cutting his hair" after converting to Islam.

He added that Nakedra had stopped allowing the two daughters she shared with Jabbar, aged 15 and 20, to spend time with him.

Jabbar also has a 6-year-old son from his second wife.

The white truck used in the attack was left at the scene
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The white truck used in the attack was left at the sceneCredit: X
A photo of one of the coolers containing an improvised explosive device (IED) placed by Shamsud-Din Jabbar
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A photo of one of the coolers containing an improvised explosive device (IED) placed by Shamsud-Din JabbarCredit: Reuters
Shamsud-Din Jabbar served over a decade in the US Army
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Shamsud-Din Jabbar served over a decade in the US ArmyCredit: 82nd Airbourne Division

According to TMZ, a woman who identifies herself as "Teira" says she was married to Jabbar for five years and that he abused her during the unhappy relationship.

She did not think he was capable of mass murder, however, and did not think that he was driven by such hatred.

TMZ said Tiera last heard from Jabbar about two months ago when he reached out to tell her he'd been thinking about the son they lost when she suffered a miscarriage.

She said they had a pleasant conversation reflecting on the past.

Public records show that Jabbar's second wife filed for a temporary restraining order against him.

The order forbade Jabbar from, among other things, sending threatening or obscene messages to his wife or causing "bodily injury" to her or their child.

The New York Times reported that Jabbar has been arrested twice: once in Katy, Texas, for theft in 2002, and once in 2005 for driving with an invalid licence.

In both cases, he was fined $100 by the court.

The New York Post has reported that Jabba was living in a run-down trailer park on the outskirts of Houston where he kept sheep and goats in the yard.

One neighbor, Francois Venegas, described Jabbar as a “simple person” who kept to himself but said they would occasionally exchange words on the street.

Venegas said: “[He was] pretty quiet…Just walking, [he would say] ‘hello,’ ‘hola,’ and that was it.”

Photos of the place he is thought to have lived show a squalid static home surrounded by dirty animal cages.

According to the paper, geese, chickens, goats and sheep roamed freely in Jabbar’s yard when they visited it.

The site was later cordoned off by police.

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NO LINK TO LAS VEGAS EXPLOSION

Raia said there is "no definitive link" between the Bourbon Street terrorist attack and the Las Vegas explosion outside the Trump International, which is also being investigated as a terrorist plot.

Surveillance footage captured the dramatic moment a  Cybertruck exploded at the front entrance of one of the president-elect's lavish hotels in Sin City.

The futuristic truck, rigged with fireworks, gas tanks, and camping fuel in the trunk, was ripped apart by a huge explosion after being detonated by the driver, according to .

The link between the Las Vegas explosion and the Bourbon Street massacre came after investigators said both the Cybertruck and the F-150 were rented through the online rental website Turo.

The person who rented the Cybertruck was identified as US Army veteran Matthew Livelsberger.

At some point, both Livelsberger and domestic terrorist Jabbar were stationed in 's Fort Liberty, formerly Fort Bragg, at the same time and were also on active deployment in .

However, investigators have not determined whether Livelsberger and Jabbar's paths ever crossed.

Investigators said Livelsberger rented the Cybertruck in Colorado Springs, , before traveling to Las Vegas, where he detonated an explosion outside the Trump International on Wednesday morning.

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The blast killed Livelsberger, 37, and injured seven others.

Federal agents ruled out any possible link between the Las Vegas explosion outside the Trump International and the Bourbon Street attack
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Federal agents ruled out any possible link between the Las Vegas explosion outside the Trump International and the Bourbon Street attackCredit: Reuters
Investigators said the Tesla Cybertruck was rigged with fireworks, gas tanks, and camping fuel in the trunk
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Investigators said the Tesla Cybertruck was rigged with fireworks, gas tanks, and camping fuel in the trunkCredit: EPA

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