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President Biden to travel to New Orleans on Monday as probe into terror driver’s background continues

Police say entire French Quarter is fully open to public with increased security

New Orleans police said that the entire French Quarter, including Bourbon Street, is now fully open to the public and security will be heightened in the wake of the New Year’s Day attack.

“We are increasing our security presence in partnership with other law enforcement agencies. This enhanced safety effort will continue daily, not just during large events,” police said. The statement was issued, in part, in response to NBC News’ questions regarding a lack of protections in place. 

Police said the department won’t disclose specific details about operation plans to protect the integrity of security efforts. 

“Rest assured, we continuously evaluate and adjust these plans to keep the community safe,” the statement said. “We ask everyone to stay alert and help us protect our city. If you see something, say something — your vigilance plays a crucial role in keeping our community safe”

FBI returns to New Orleans attacker’s Texas home

Federal investigators returned today to the north Harris County, Texas, home registered to the New Orleans attack driver, Shamsud-Din Jabbar, NBC affiliate KPRC of Houston reported.

FBI Houston said “law enforcement activity” was being conducted there.

Bourbon Street workers say city should have protected the area

Reporting from New Orleans

Wayne Jones, 50, a security guard at a bar on Bourbon Street, said the area should have been better secured on New Year’s Eve ahead of the attack.

“I think the city failed us,” he said.

He pointed out that the steel Archer barriers that the city installed on the sidewalks on Bourbon Street the day after the attack would have been useful on the night the street was packed with New Year’s revelers. “Why wasn’t that on the sidewalk?” he asked. “That would have slowed him down,” he added of the attacker. 

Jones and other local workers also questioned the decision to replace the street’s long-malfunctioning security bollards during the winter, which is the busiest time for the French Quarter.  

“It seems worse than poor planning,” said Rory Windhorst, who works at a business on Bourbon Street near the site of the attack. He noted that the city was pouring money into preparing for the Super Bowl in February, and he wondered whether there had been a “gross miscalculation” in how the resources were used.

The city released a statement yesterday saying it “is committed to ensuring the safety and functionality of Bourbon Street” and that the bollard replacement, which is underway, is part of that commitment.

New Orleans was told to fix security bollards in 2019

New Orleans officials were urged to fix the faulty security bollard system in the city’s French Quarter, home to Bourbon Street, back in November 2019 and were forewarned that a vehicle ramming incident was one of the most likely forms that a terrorist attack there could take.

Interfor International, a corporate intelligence firm, completed the safety assessment report for the French Quarter Management District. An executive summary for that report was published online in 2020, with less detail than the full report, which remained private.

An excerpt of the full report, obtained by NBC News and first reported by The New York Times, said that the city should not only fix the bollard system, but also consider shutting Bourbon Street to vehicular traffic with the exception of midmorning deliveries, as is the practice for Mardi Gras.

“The current bollard system on Bourbon Street does not appear to work,” the report said. “Interfor has received conflicting explanations as to why the existing bollard system is rarely used. Some residents and business owners reported that beads frequently fall into the tracks rendering the devices temporarily inoperable. Others claim there are not enough personnel available to deploy them on the existing schedule.”

Interfor strongly recommended that bollard mobilization be “fixed/improved immediately,” noting that “the two modes of terror attack most likely be used are vehicle ramming and active shooting.”

French Quarter Management District and the city did not immediately respond to requests for comment on the report. City officials have defended the security measures on Bourbon Street and described the New Year’s attacker as determined to commit violence regardless of protections.

Law enforcement documents reveal concern over possibility of copycat attacks

Analysis documents of the New Orleans ISIS-inspired terrorist attack released by several law enforcement agencies, both local and federal, reveal concern over possible copycat plots.

The documents didn’t reveal any new details about Shamsud-Din Jabbar or his attack, but noted it was the second-deadliest attack on U.S. soil tied to a foreign terrorist organization since 9/11, with the worst being the Pulse nightclub shooting in 2016 in Orlando, Florida.

The documents noted that Jabbar followed the guidance of ISIS-produced publications and that copycat attacks remain a concern due to the low-cost and vulnerable method of attack. 

An NYPD analysis notes that such attacks underscore the need for blocker cars on streets, the use of heavy blocks as barriers and bollards on sidewalks to prevent vehicles from accessing streets populated with pedestrians or parade routes. 

Turo CEO says there were no ‘red flags’ to stop New Orleans driver

Turo CEO Andre Haddad said the company has not seen any connection between the Las Vegas and New Orleans New Year’s Day incidents, and they are focused on supporting those affected.

Both the truck used in the New Orleans ramming attack and the Tesla Cybertruck that was involved in an explosion in Las Vegas were rented on the car-sharing app Turo.

“My first thoughts are for the victims’ families. We are really heartbroken for them. This feels so unfair,” Haddad said on CNBC this morning.

The company’s investigations found both individuals had clean criminal backgrounds, valid driver’s licenses and “there were no red flags.”

“No one would have flagged them as a security risk. So it’s a very challenging situation to deal with,” he said. 

He stressed that the company has a very strong safety record “with a 0.1% serious incident rate only, which I think is industry leading.”

He said there hasn’t been any impact on business. 

“Frankly, I haven’t been looking at our metrics that much. I’ve been very focused on the investigation. Our team has rallied around supporting law enforcement and getting to the bottom of what happened, so but as far as I could tell, superficially, there hasn’t been any noticeable impact.”

New Orleans attacker transformed from a model soldier into an ISIS supporter

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BEAUMONT, Texas — Shamsud-Din Jabbar’s high school friends knew him as “Sham” — a good student with a quiet disposition and a bright future. He went on to become a model soldier in the Army, where his work ethic and attitude impressed his commander during a tour in Afghanistan. 

“He was a great soldier, someone who showed discipline and dedication,” the commander, Rich Groen, posted on social media. 

But over the past few years, as Jabbar worked to climb the corporate ladder, his life began to deteriorate. He faced severe money problems and a third divorce. At some point, he fell under the sway of the Islamic State, the terrorist group known as ISIS.

On New Year’s Eve, Jabbar, 42, drove a rented truck from Houston to New Orleans, authorities said, posting videos online along the way in which he professed his support for ISIS. Once he reached Bourbon Street, he planted two improvised explosive devices and then got back into his truck and plowed into revelers, killing 14 before police shot and killed him in a gunbattle. 

Read the full story here.

LSU women’s basketball coach says New Year’s Day attack was ‘so close to home’

Louisiana State University women’s basketball coach Kim Mulkey became emotional as she addressed reporters last night, saying the Bourbon Street attack is “so close to home.”

“There were kids from our area, Baton Rouge. I can’t quit thinking about it, to be honest. I can’t quit thinking about it. It’s so close to home, it just hits you right smack in the face. And you get emotional because I just cannot imagine those families right now and what they’re having to deal with,” she said. “You just pray. That’s all you can do is just pray, pray, pray that somehow, someway, they can deal with it and continue on with their lives.”

A moment of silence for the lives lost in the New Year’s Day New Orleans attack was held before last night’s game in Arkansas. 

President Joe Biden will travel to New Orleans on Monday

President Joe Biden and first lady Jill Biden will travel to New Orleans on Monday, the White House announced today. 

They will grieve with families and community members affected in the New Year’s Day attack on Bourbon Street and meet with officials on the ground. 

Brother of driver behind Bourbon Street attack says, ‘This wasn’t the man I knew’

The younger brother of the driver in the New Year’s Day terrorist attack on Bourbon Street in New Orleans said he’s shocked by his brother’s actions and there were no red flags he noticed before the attack. 

“Our hearts, prayers and thoughts go out to those families, the victims and those who witnessed it. … It’s a tragedy,” Abdur Rahem Jabbar told NBC affiliate KPRC of Houston. “This wasn’t the man I knew. This wasn’t the father, the son that I knew. And that also this isn’t a representation of Islam or Muslims or the Muslim community.”

“I understand people want answers, but we’re just as puzzled as the rest of the world,” he added.

People walk past a memorial at Bourbon and Canal Street in the French Quarter, Thursday, Jan. 2, 2025 in New Orleans.
People walk past a memorial in the French Quarter yesterday.George Walker IV / AP

He said that his brother, Shamsud-Din Jabbar, grew up in Beaumont and was living in Houston. He has three kids and had multiple divorces. He also faced financial burdens.

“Sham believed his Islamic faith taught him that partying in places like New Orleans wasn’t righteous,” Abdur Rahem Jabbar said. “But he never gave any red flags leading up to this.”


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