6 Jan 2025

FBI looking into New Orleans attack suspect's visits to Egypt, Canada

7:42 am on 6 January 2025

By Kanishka Singh, Reuters

FBI investigators arrive at the scene where the white Ford F-150 pickup truck that crashed into a work lift after allegedly driving into a crowd of New Year's revelers in the French Quarter of New Orleans, Louisiana, on January 1, 2025. - At least 10 people were killed and 30 injured Wednesday when a vehicle plowed overnight into a New year's crowd in the heart of the thriving New Orleans tourist district, authorities in the southern US city said. (Photo by Matthew HINTON / AFP)

Photo: MATTHEW HINTON/AFP

The FBI is looking into past visits to Egypt and Canada by the suspect in the New Year's Day attack in New Orleans that killed 14 people after a small truck was rammed into a crowd of revellers, an FBI official told reporters.

Shamsud-Din Jabbar, a US Army veteran aged 42 who had pledged allegiance to the Islamic State extremist group, was the suspect in the attack and the FBI says he acted alone. He was killed in a shootout with police after the rampage, which also injured dozens of people and has been labelled by the FBI as an act of terrorism.

"We have also tracked that Jabbar travelled to Cairo, Egypt, from 22 June until 3 July of 2023. A few days later he flew to Ontario, Canada, on 10 July and returned to the US on 13 July of 2023," Lyonel Myrthil, FBI special agent in charge of the New Orleans field office, said at a press briefing.

"Our agents are getting answers as to where he went, who he met with and how those trips may or may not tie into his actions in our city in New Orleans," he added.

The FBI also said Jabbar made at least two trips to New Orleans in the months prior to the attack, one in October and the other in November.

The suspect stayed in a rental home in New Orleans during that time, the FBI said, adding he recorded videos with Meta glasses travelling through the French Quarter, the neighbourhood in New Orleans where the attack occurred on Bourbon Street.

The New Orleans coroner's office has identified all 14 deceased victims, among whom the youngest was aged 18 and the oldest was 63. Most were in their 20s.

-Reuters

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