在致命的撞车袭击在新奥尔良熙熙攘攘的波旁街,联邦调查人员公布了元旦事件的时间表。
周三凌晨,一辆福特F-150卡车撞向行人,引发枪战,造成14人死亡,35人受伤。
在周四的新闻发布会上,美国联邦调查局负责反恐事务的副助理局长克里斯托弗·拉亚(Christopher Raia)指出,虽然对袭击的调查还处于早期阶段,但调查人员认为,42岁的嫌疑人沙姆苏德-迪姆·贾巴尔,单独行动。
美国联邦调查局官员称,得克萨斯州居民贾巴尔在袭击前在社交媒体上宣称支持恐怖组织“伊斯兰国”,他在与新奥尔良警方的交火中被打死。
此外,当局在贾巴尔租来的皮卡车后发现了一面“伊斯兰国”国旗。
美国广播公司(ABC News)获得的法庭记录显示,他是一名出生于美国的公民和退伍军人,此前为咨询公司德勤(Deloitte)工作。
随着关于贾巴尔和袭击背后潜在动机的画像开始浮出水面,联邦调查人员列出了导致官员称之为“恐怖主义行为”的事件的时间表。
12月30日:在休斯顿租的卡车
据官员称,12月30日周一,贾巴尔在德克萨斯州休斯顿通过租车应用Turo租了一辆白色福特F-150卡车。
12月31日:乔巴从休斯顿开车去新奥尔良
联邦调查人员说,贾巴尔周二从休斯顿开车到新奥尔良。
车程约五个半小时,跨越340多英里。
1月1日:贾巴尔向脸书发布支持“伊斯兰国”的视频
在周四的新闻发布会上,拉亚说,联邦调查人员发现贾巴尔在社交媒体上发布了五段视频,“宣布他支持“伊斯兰国””根据Raia的说法,这些视频是在美国东部时间凌晨1点29分至3点02分之间发布的。
“在第一段视频中,贾巴尔解释说,他原本计划伤害他的家人和朋友,但担心新闻标题不会聚焦于‘信徒和不信者之间的战争’”,拉亚说。
据Raia报道,在其中一个视频中,Jabbar提到他在今年夏天之前就加入了“伊斯兰国”。
Raia称这次袭击是有预谋的“恐怖主义行为”
1月1日:袭击波旁街
据官员说,大约在美国东部时间凌晨3点15分,贾巴尔将租来的卡车开进了波旁街的一个封锁区,行人正在那里庆祝节日。
警方称,嫌疑人在这条世界闻名的大道上的三个街区内砍倒了数十人,同时向人群开枪。
据官员称,袭击造成14人死亡,35人受伤,他们说贾巴尔是在暴乱中与警方交火时被打死的。
1月1日:发现爆炸装置
Raia说,袭击发生后,当局在波旁街地区的冷却器中发现了两个简易爆炸装置。
根据Raia的说法,监控录像显示贾巴尔将这些装置放在冷却器里。他说,这是唯一找到的设备,而且都很安全。
1月1日:受害者确认
一位年轻的母亲教她的儿子阅读。一名前大学橄榄球运动员住在纽约市的“世界之巅”。一个18岁的有抱负的护士。作为两个孩子的父亲,他被认为是“派对的灵魂”
在这起致命事件发生后,家人和朋友已经开始辨认在波旁街遇难的14人。
关于每个受害者的更多信息,请阅读ABC新闻在这里的报道.
1月2日:贾巴尔的离婚和财政困难曝光
根据美国广播公司新闻查阅的法庭记录,贾巴尔有着复杂的婚姻史,其间多次离婚,经济困难。
记录还显示,服完兵役后,贾巴尔为德勤工作,他的目标是发展自己羽翼未丰的房地产业务。
截至2022年,在德勤工作期间,文件显示贾巴尔的年薪接近125,000美元,这一工资被法院下令为他过去婚姻的子女支付的款项所抵消,同时被信用卡和抵押贷款债务进一步侵蚀。
根据法庭记录,2012年,他的前妻Nakedra Charrlle Jabbar成功起诉他,要求他支付这对夫妇的两个女儿的抚养费,当时这两个女儿分别为8岁和3岁。
4年后的2016年,贾巴尔在佐治亚州的迪卡尔布县(Dekalb County)申请与另一位妻子蒂埃拉·西蒙·贾巴尔(Tiera Symone Jabbar)离婚。
根据法院文件,2020年7月,在德克萨斯州的本德堡县,贾巴尔申请与他的第三任妻子沙宁·尚提尔·贾巴尔离婚,他们于2017年11月结婚。
关于乔巴的婚姻和经济困难的更多信息,请阅读ABC新闻在这里的报道.
FBI releases timeline of suspect Shamsud-Dim Jabbar's New Orleans attack
In the wake of the deadlycar-ramming attackon New Orleans' bustling Bourbon Street, federal investigators have released a timeline of events surrounding the New Year's Day incident.
Fourteen people were killed and 35 others were injured after a Ford F-150 truck plowed into pedestrians and gunfire erupted in the early hours of Wednesday morning.
During a press briefing on Thursday, the FBI's deputy assistant director for the counterterrorism division, Christopher Raia, noted that while the investigation into the attack is in its early stages, investigators believe the suspect, 42-year-oldShamsud-Dim Jabbar, acted alone.
Jabbar, a Texas resident who FBI officials said proclaimed his support for the terror group ISIS in social media posts ahead of the attack, was killed in gunfire exchanged with New Orleans police.
Additionally, an ISIS flag was recovered by authorities from the back of Jabbar's rented pickup truck following the rampage.
He was a U.S.-born citizen and Army veteran who previously worked for the consulting firm Deloitte, according to court records obtained by ABC News.
As a portrait begins to emerge about Jabbar and potential motivations behind the attack, federal investigators have laid out a timeline of events that led up to the incident officials have dubbed an "act of terrorism."
Dec. 30: Truck rented in Houston
On Monday, Dec. 30, Jabbar rented a white Ford F-150 truck in Houston, Texas, through the car rental app Turo, according to officials.
Dec. 31: Jabbar drives from Houston to New Orleans
Federal investigators said that Jabbar drove from Houston to New Orleans on Tuesday.
The drive is approximately five and a half hours, spanning over 340 miles.
Jan. 1: Jabbar posts pro-ISIS videos to Facebook
During the press briefing on Thursday, Raia said that federal investigators found that Jabbar posted five videos to social media "proclaiming his support for ISIS." The videos were posted between 1:29 a.m. CT and 3:02 a.m. CT, according to Raia.
"In the first video, Jabbar explains he originally planned to harm his family and friends but was concerned the news headlines would not focus on the 'war between the believers and the disbelievers,'" Raia said.
In one of the videos, Jabbar noted that he joined ISIS before this summer, according to Raia.
Raia called the attack a premeditated "act of terrorism."
Jan. 1: Attack on Bourbon Street
At approximately 3:15 a.m. CT, Jabbar plowed the rented truck into a blocked-off sectionof Bourbon Street where pedestrians were celebrating the holiday, according to officials.
The suspect mowed down dozens of people over a three-block stretch on the world-famous thoroughfare while firing into the crowd, police said.
The attack left 14 people killed and 35 others injured, according to officials, who said Jabbar was killed while exchanging gunfire with police during the rampage.
Jan. 1: Explosive devices recovered
Following the attack, authorities recovered two improvised explosive devices left in coolers in the Bourbon Street area, Raia said.
Surveillance footage showed Jabbar placingthe devices in the coolers, according to Raia. Those were the only devices recovered and both were rendered safe, he said.
Jan. 1: Victims identified
A young mother teaching her son to read. A former college football player "on top of the world" living in New York City. An 18-year-old aspiring nurse. A father of two remembered as the "life of the party."
In the aftermath of the deadly incident, family members and friends have begun identifying the 14 people killed on Bourbon Street.
For more about each of the victims readABC News' coverage here.
Jan. 2: Jabbar's divorces and financial difficulties come to light
Jabbar had a checkered marital history punctuated by multiple divorces and financial difficulty, according to court records reviewed by ABC News.
The records also show that after his military service, Jabbar worked for Deloitte as he aimed to grow his own fledgling real estate business.
As of 2022, while employed by Deloitte, documents show Jabbar was making close to $125,000 a year -- a salary that was chipped away at by court-ordered payments for his children from a past marriage, while being further eroded by credit card and mortgage debt.
In 2012, his ex-wife, Nakedra Charrlle Jabbar, successfully sued him for child support payments for the couple's two daughters, who were 8 and 3 years old at the time, according to court records.
Four years later, in 2016, Jabbar filed for divorce from another wife, Tiera Symone Jabbar, in Dekalb County, Georgia.
In July 2020, in Fort Bend County, Texas, Jabbar filed for divorce from his third wife, Shaneen Chantil Jabbar, whom he married in Nov. 2017, according to court filings.
For more about Jabbar's marriages and financial difficulties readABC News' coverage here.