The driver of the cybertruck probably died from a gunshot wound to the head

An electric vehicle explodes in Las Vegas, sparking a “bomb” of a terrorist attack,” said Eric Trump, president of the Trump Las Vegas branch

Eric Trump, Donald Trump’s son, said that the electric vehicle fire occurred at the porte cochre of Trump Las Vegas. The safety and well-being of our guests and staff remain our top priority. We extend our heartfelt gratitude to the Las Vegas Fire Department and local law enforcement for their swift response and professionalism.”

We were standing near the luggage where the footage was shot. I saw it pull up, and as it lowered itself like a bus, boom it went. It first looked like fireworks. They said that they thought it could be a bomb and ran.

We haven’t yet found a video of the vehicle catching fire, but several others on X say they witnessed an “explosion” and captured videos of the rising smoke. Stephen Felando claimed the windows shook violently, while Max agreed with him that there were multiple explosions.

Las Vegas Metropolitan Police and Clark County Fire Department officials told a news conference that a person died inside the futuristic-looking pickup truck and they were working to get the body out. Seven people nearby had minor injuries and several were taken to a hospital.

Police said the truck was rented in Colorado. The vehicle was traced to Las Vegas an hour before the explosion by authorities thanks to the charging stations. Authorities called the incident “isolated.”

Musk said on the show that the explosion was caused by big fireworks or a bomb carried in the bed of the rented Cybertruck, and is unrelated to the vehicle itself. All data from the vehicle was positive during the explosion.

“The wholeTesla senior team is investigating this matter right now, after attending a New Years Eve party at the Mar-a-Lago resort,” Musk said in an earlier post on the platform. “We’ve never seen anything like this.”

Law enforcement officials have not ruled out terrorism as a possible motive, a person familiar with the matter said. They were not authorized to discuss details of the investigation, so the person spoke on condition of anonymity.

“I know you have a lot of questions,” Jeremy Schwartz, acting special agent in charge for the FBI’s Las Vegas office, told reporters. “We don’t have a lot of answers.”

The Cybertuck Attack: The Driver of a Cybertruck that Explodes on a Boulevard in New Orleans on New Year’s Day

President Joe Biden was briefed on the explosion. The truck explosion came hours after a driver rammed a truck into a crowd in New Orleans’ famed French Quarter early on New Year’s Day, killing at least 10 people before being shot to death by police.

The battery was the first thing we saw that caught fire, followed by the big one that smokes the area and then everyone was told to stay away,” Bruce said.

Authorities have identified the driver of the Cybertruck that exploded in front of the Trump hotel in Las Vegas as 37-year-old Master Sgt. Matthew Alan Livelsberger. In a news briefing Thursday afternoon, police say they still don’t have 100 percent confirmation because he was “burned beyond recognition” in the Jan. 1 blast. They are waiting for a saliva sample to confirm his identity.

Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Sheriff Kevin McMahill says Livelsberger sustained a gunshot wound to the head prior to the Cybertuck detonating; investigators believe it was self inflicted.

An active-duty Special Operations soldier named Livelsberger was employed by the U.S. Army. The man who drove a truck onto a sidewalk in New Orleans on New Year’s Day, killing at least 15 people and injuring dozens more, was a person of similar age and race. McMahill said both men served at Fort Bragg in North Carolina, though there’s no indication they served in the same unit. They both used the rental car app Turo to rent the vehicles used in the attacks. Mc Mahill has no information on additional parallels. Law enforcement and intelligence officials are investigating any potential connection between the two incidents.

A source familiar with Livelsberger’s background who was not authorized to speak publicly on the matter tells NPR’s Tom Bowman that Livelsberger was deployed five times to Afghanistan on combat missions. He had not been out of the country for a year.

The FBI now says the suspect in the New Orleans truck attack acted alone, according to a spokesperson for the Houston, Fla., explosion

The FBI is in contact with area law enforcement regarding the explosion, according to Jeremy Schwartz, acting special agent in charge. The FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force was looking into the explosion as a possible act of terrorism.

“We do not assess at this point that anyone else is involved in this attack,” Christopher Raia, FBI deputy assistant director with the agency’s counterterrorism division, told reporters during a press conference.

There is no evidence that anyone assisted him in the attack and investigators are combing through his five electronic devices looking for clues.

On Wednesday, the FBI believed that Jabbar did not act alone, but they were still looking for information that could help them find more people involved in the attack.

The driver rented a white F-150 on Monday in Houston before heading to New Orleans on Tuesday, according to Raia. Jabbar posted “several videos” to social media declaring his support for ISIS and explained that while he planned to hurt his family and friends he was concerned the news headlines would not focus on the “war between the believers and the disbelievers,” Raia said. Jabbar also said he joined ISIS before the summer of 2024.

Bourbon Street was reopened to pedestrians on Thursday after being cleaned overnight. Fourteen yellow roses have been placed on the sidewalk near Canal Street as a makeshift memorial for each of those killed in the speeding rampage.

“With law enforcement assets that would typically be allocated to an event of this stature currently engaged in active investigations related to the incident, the postponement will allow for additional security resources to be put in place in order to maintain the typical standards of a major event in the Caesars Superdome,” the Sugar Bowl said in a statement Wednesday night.

When asked about the security in the city, the Louisiana Governor told reporters that officials reinforced the area and used some additional assets.

“I don’t like to give specifics because I don’t like to tell the enemy what we got,” he said. “We’re in better shape than we were before, but that’s up to you,” he said. He said there is an “unprecedented amount of law enforcement resources that are being utilized to finish the investigation”.

Source: FBI now says the suspect in the deadly New Orleans truck attack acted alone

Jabbar, the Charged Cybertruck Associated with an Attack on a New Orleans Host House in Las Vegas, According to the FBI

Raia said said there is currently “no definitive link” between the attack in New Orleans and a Cybertruck explosion in Las Vegas in front of the Trump Hotel on Wednesday, in which the suspect was killed inside the vehicle.

Jabbar, who was a U.S. citizen, was honorably discharged from the Army, according to the FBI. He also served as a Human Resource Specialist and Information Technology Specialist from March 2007 until January 2015 and then in the Army Reserve as an IT Specialist until July 2020, an Army spokesperson confirmed to NPR. He was in Afghanistan for over a year in February 2009. He was given the rank of staff sergeant after leaving the service.

The FBI stated in a post on social media that there is no threat to people in the area, and said that they had finished their search of the house. The Texas Newsroom reported that a neighbor, who didn’t know Jabbar by name, described the suspect as quiet and their interactions as normal.

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