Jan 2, 2025
Truck Driver Kills 15, Injures Dozens In Deadly New Year's Rampage
Truck Driver Kills 15, Injures Dozens In Deadly New Year's Rampage
- 9 minutes
The man decides to drive
into a crowd in New Orleans.
It's very sad. Put up the picture for me.
I'm going to give you the background
and the update as we currently have it.
So according to the FBI, at least 15
people are dead. 30 people were injured
[00:00:18]
after a man drove a truck into a crowd at
Bourbon and Canal Street in New Orleans.
This was on New Year's Day.
This is being considered
a terrorist attack.
The identity of the suspect
[00:00:36]
and the truck has been confirmed.
The suspect is Shamsuddin Jabar.
US Army veteran out of the state of Texas.
Here's what we know.
A man intentionally drove a pickup truck
into a crowd on Bourbon Street
[00:00:56]
in New Orleans.
This is the French Quarter
in a deadly rampage Page.
Early on New Year's Day.
At least 14 people were killed before the
attacker died in a shootout with police.
That's according to the official report.
Dozens of others were injured in the
attack, so a black ISIS flag was flying
[00:01:15]
from the truck's rear bumper.
And the attack is being investigated
as an act of terrorism.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation said
the pickup truck appeared to be rented.
In televised remarks Wednesday evening,
[00:01:32]
President Biden said the FBI has
determined just hours before the attack,
Jabar posted videos to social media
indicating that he was inspired
by ISIS expressing a desire to kill,
that he was inspired by ISIS
[00:01:49]
expressing a desire to kill,
FBI agent Alethea Duncan said
at a news conference Wednesday afternoon
that investigators, quote,
did not believe that Jabbar was
solely responsible for the attack,
[00:02:04]
and the FBI believes he may
have had help carrying it out.
Duncan said the FBI is looking at a,
quote,
range of suspects, range of suspects.
We don't know exactly what that means yet
and does not want to rule anything out
at this stage of the investigation.
[00:02:19]
The FBI is also working to determine
his potential affiliations or associations
with terrorist associations.
So a person familiar with
the investigation told CBS news
that at this point, neither ISIS nor any
other foreign terror organization
[00:02:38]
has claimed responsibility for the attack.
The attacker drove around barricades
and up onto the sidewalk of Bourbon
Street, new Orleans Police Department
Superintendent and Kirkpatrick said,
avoiding barriers
that had been placed by police.
Kirkpatrick said the man, quote,
was trying to run over as many people
[00:02:58]
as he could, end quote.
The man then exited the car and opened
fire on officers, the FBI official said.
He died after exchanging gunfire with
three responding officers, the FBI said.
He was struck by police fire
and declared dead at the scene.
[00:03:17]
The New Orleans Police Department
said two police officers were hit
by gunfire but are in stable condition.
Let's put up the police chief.
A statement came from the chief.
Quote, we had a car there.
We had barriers there.
[00:03:33]
We had officers there
and he still got around.
Kirkpatrick said weapons and two potential
improvised explosive devices, or IEDs,
were located in the vehicle.
Duncan said at least one other IED
was found in the French Quarter and was
[00:03:54]
detonated by law enforcement, a person
familiar with the investigation said.
The number of IEDs left behind
is a large part of why the FBI believes
the man may have had an accomplice.
Sources tell CBS news investigators
are combing through video
to see if there were accomplices
involved in placing the devices.
[00:04:12]
Sources told CBS news.
Now the FBI is actually
leading the investigation.
Marissa, do we have that video
of him talking?
So there's a there's an old YouTube video.
It gives you an idea of of some
of his character and mannerism.
[00:04:29]
Here it is.
Texas. And now live in Houston.
And I've been here all my life, with the
exception of traveling for the military,
where I spent ten years as a human
resources specialist and IT specialist,
where I learned the meaning of great
service and what it means to be responsive
[00:04:46]
and take everything seriously,
dotting i's and crossing t's to make sure
that things go off without a hitch.
So I've taken those skills
and applied them to my career.
Human resource specialist
and IT specialists have described.
This is a very sad occasion.
Now, obviously, it was quickly determined,
[00:05:08]
categorized as an act of terrorism.
I agree with the category just given
the amount of information available now.
I will say this.
[00:05:23]
According to the FBI narrative, this
individual was radicalized by propaganda.
That's according to their own narrative,
ISIS propaganda.
Understand that if somebody can be
[00:05:40]
radicalized by propaganda in the context
of ISIS, that there are people who are
radicalized by political propaganda
in the context of MAGA.
Understand these things
are not mutually exclusive.
They are connected.
That propaganda can radicalize people
[00:05:59]
to do extremely dangerous things,
such as attempt to kill a bunch of people
and sometimes successfully do at one time.
It is unfortunate.
Obviously, the investigation continues.
Our information is currently not complete.
[00:06:17]
We will bring you updates.
Ben, what are your thoughts on this?
Yeah, I think it's great
that you're highlighting the fact
that this is a terrorist attack
and this man's radical radicalization into
ISIS ideology and working on their behalf,
[00:06:33]
whether they claim it or not,
is not the point.
The man clearly,
there's no more clear evidence.
And I don't know why the media in general
is doing such a great job of burying
the fact that this is a terror attack.
The man had an ISIS flag
on the back of his truck
while running people down, clear as day.
[00:06:50]
They were very quick to say
Luigi Mangione was a terror attack
when it's literally not even fitting
the definition of terrorism.
He was trying to target
one specific person
of a very elite small class of people.
Not that he should have done that,
but that's not black and white terror
[00:07:06]
like this is this is a great example
of the dangers facing us here in the West
of radical Islamic terrorism.
This is what happens when people are
radicalized and bastardize an otherwise
peaceful, beautiful religion of Islam,
and take it to murder people
[00:07:24]
who don't agree with them.
This man apparently said that he was
originally thinking about killing his
own family, but that the news coverage
wouldn't be focused then on the fight
of believers versus nonbelievers.
This is jihadism on our shores.
This can't be buried.
I don't know why we've gotten into
this PC place where we are afraid
[00:07:42]
to call something what it is on its face.
This is what globalizing
the intifada means.
It means they're coming for us in the West
to have Western values
who believe in equality for all people,
all belief systems.
And this is a man that just so clearly
you see him in a clip before was a
[00:08:00]
a patriot was a man who served his country
and due to ISIS propaganda kills American
citizens because he hates our values.
He hates what we stand for.
He wants to impose
his religious beliefs on others.
[00:08:16]
And when you support that kind of thing
in some weird presentation of, oh,
I think it's important to support anyone.
No, you don't support people
whose beliefs are specifically to kill us,
to kill people with Western values.
[00:08:32]
You stick with our allies.
You stick with the people that support
what we stand for and not imposing
their religious extremism on the world.
Yeah.
And when you zoom out and and not get
so caught up in the weeds
because sometimes we can
we can miss the bigger dynamic at play.
[00:08:53]
The bigger dynamic is
this lack of value for human life,
this lack of value for human life?
And that may seem fluffy
to some people, but it's real.
The more you can see yourself,
the more you can appreciate the
[00:09:11]
experiences of life for yourself, the more
you can see who you are as an independent,
autonomous, sovereign human being.
The more you see that in other people.
But when you don't see yourself,
it's very difficult to see other folk.
[00:09:28]
And our political narrative,
our cultural narrative,
and sometimes our social narrative
gets into the us and them, where they are,
those who are devalued, and then those
[00:09:45]
are prompted as more valuable than, and
that becomes the genesis for much of this.
It's very unfortunate.
Obviously, we will keep you updated
as more information comes.
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