Federal authorities discovered a cooler filled with sulfuric acid in a Texas storage unit similar to the one found after Shamsud-Din Jabbar carried out his deadly truck attack on Bourbon Street,
FBI Houston confirms that a “court-authorized law enforcement activity” was conducted at a storage facility on Monday night in relation to the New Orleans attack on New Year's Day.
According to an NBC affiliate in Houston, agents were seen in and out of at least one storage unit at SpareBox Storage on Walters Road.
The FBI confirmed it found a cooler with bottles of sulfuric acid in a storage unit that was searched in Harris County as part of its investigation into the deadly New Orleans attack.
FBI Houston says bottles of sulfuric acid were found inside a cooler at a Harris County storage facility rented by the Bourbon Street terrorist Shamsud-Din Jabbar.
The U.S. Army veteran who drove a pickup truck into a crowd of New Year’s revelers acted alone, the FBI said Thursday, reversing its position from a day earlier that he likely worked with others in the deadly attack that officials said was inspired by the Islamic State group.
On Thursday morning, they said their search was completed. The FBI in Houston released the following update Wednesday night. "FBI Houston and the Harris County Sheriff’s Office are continuing a ...
Precursor chemicals” for making explosives were found at the home of terrorist Shamsud-Din Jabbar’s home in Houston, according to the FBI. Multiple news reports confirmed agents returned to Jabbar’s mobile home Friday to seek more evidence after first raiding it Thursday.
The criminal complaint states Liang and others tricked a Waukesha woman out of $707,390 in cashier's checks and gold bars over about a year timeframe. Court documents indicate the woman was targeted with a popup on her computer telling her to call a phone number.
By making a bomb with the powerful explosive RDX, Shamsud-Din Jabbar was mimicking the tactics of terrorist groups operating in the Middle East, experts say.
A new report from NBC news says the suspect accused of a terrorist attack in New Orleans used an explosive so powerful it could have killed hundreds had the bombs worked. According to NBC, the explosive was so powerful that shrapnel could have been sprayed for hundreds of yards.