The FBI said an initial review of Shamsud-Din Jabbar, 42, showed that the man conducted extensive online research into New Orleans before the rampage.
MYRTLE BEACH, SC (WMBF) - The City of Myrtle Beach is looking to bulk up its security after the deadly New Orleans terror attack. Myrtle Beach City Council will vote Tuesday morning on buying $630,000 worth of security items, including car barriers, beam gate systems and related accessories.
Shamsud Din-Jabbar drove his truck into a crowd of people on Bourbon Street early on New Year’s Day. He was killed in a shootout with police. The FBI described it as a terrorist attack.
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 ...
The FBI investigated personal devices belonging to the suspect of the Bourbon Street attack, and found eerie evidence within suspect's search history.
The FBI said the man behind the New Year's Day pickup truck attack in New Orleans researched how to ... a similar incident at a Christmas market in Germany. In a statement released Tuesday ...
Recent vehicle ramming attacks in New Orleans and Germany have reignited discussions on pedestrian safety and hostile vehicle mitigation in urban environments. These tragic events underscore the importance of proactive measures to protect public spaces.
Nazi German forces murdered some 1.1 million people at the site in southern Poland, which was under German occupation during World War II.
Elderly camp survivors, some wearing striped scarves that recall their prison uniforms, walked to the the Death Wall, where prisoners were executed. Across Europe, officials were pausing to remember.
The play is 'an unhinged maelstrom of vulgarity, violence and self-serving ineptitude,' says theater critic Brad Rhines.
Gans died in 2012 at age 89, but now his cello, along with its bow and other artifacts from his life, have been donated by his family to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C.
A. Grünebaum shoe store in Witten, Germany, before World War II. Suzanne Cohen's great-great-uncle started the store, and after the Holocaust, she and her family believed it was gone. She recently discovered her relatives are still running it. (Courtesy of Suzanne Cohen)