FBI Houston revealed that investigators found bottles of commercially available sulfuric acid in a storage unit linked to Bourbon Street attack suspect Shamsud-Din Jabbar.
Bourbon Street, New Orleans attack raises questions about ways to best protect crowds during large events. What are Houston's strategies and plans?
Houston ties to the Bourbon Street in New Orleans tragedy raise questions about safety and radicalization. We dive into the aftermath and what’s next.
FBI officials said Jabbar was wearing the same smart glasses as he placed coolers containing explosive devices at two Bourbon Street locations early Wednesday (Jan. 1), in the final 90 minutes before he drove a rented white Ford pickup truck around an NOPD car on Canal Street and used it to plow through victims on Bourbon Street at 3:15 a.m.
The items were found when agents executed a search warrant at Jabbar's home in the small community of Greenspoint, in north Houston. Bourbon Street reopened Thursday after 14 people were killed ...
The man who is suspected of committing the New Years Day vehicle-ramming attack in New Orleans searched online for information about the Christmas market car-ramming attack in Germany, just hours before carrying out his own attack on Bourbon Street, according to the FBI.
The FBI is revealing new details in their investigation as they try to determine what motivated a Houston man to drive his car into a crowd in New Orleans, killing 14 people and injuring 57 others on New Year's Day.
Before plowing a pickup truck into a crowd of New Year’s revelers in New Orleans, killing 14 people, the man who carried out the Islamic State group-inspired attack had researched how to access a balcony on the city's famed Bourbon Street and looked up information about a similar recent attack at a Christmas market in Germany,
AT FIVE, WE ARE GETTING NEW DETAILS ABOUT THE SUSPECT IN THE BOURBON STREET TERROR ATTACK AND THOSE STILL GRIEVING AND RECOVERING AFTER THE TRAGEDY, THE FBI NOW SAYS 57 PEOPLE WERE HURT WHEN A TOTAL OF 136 PEOPLE WERE AFFECTED.
The man who is suspected of committing the New Years Day vehicle-ramming attack in New Orleans searched online for information about the Christmas market car-ramming attack in Germany, just hours before carrying out his own attack on Bourbon Street, according to the FBI.