It may be mentioned that the 'war on terror' led by the US following 9/11, was essentially an American combat against Islamic ...
Media reports indicated that the Texas Rangers were in Lee County on Wednesday, Jan. 1, to look into possible links to the New Orleans terrorist suspect.
The storage unit is located less than a mile away from Shamsud-Din Jabbar's home, which was searched twice last week after he allegedly rammed a truck into a crowd in New Orleans during the early ...
On December 31, before entering Louisiana, Jabbar visited a gun store in Texas, then another business where he bought one of the ice chests he would use later to hide the IEDs he constructed ...
As a portrait begins to emerge of the suspect behind the deadly New Orleans attack, federal investigators have laid out a timeline of events.
As officials worked to confirm details about the attack, Fox News reported that the pickup truck Jabbar rented came into the U.S. at the Eagle Pass, Texas, border crossing. At 10:40 a.m. ET on Jan. 1, ...
Mythril said Jabbar went to multiple gun stores, including one in Texas on Dec. 31, in the days before the attack. He then visited a business in Texas where he purchased a cooler where he hid one ...
Law enforcement identified the suspect as Shamsud Din-Jabbar, an army veteran who lived near Houston ... bollards has come up recently within the Austin City Council and the Texas Legislature ...
Shamsud-Din Jabbar, a 42-year-old Army veteran and U.S.—born citizen from Texas, had traveled to the north African country alone, according to his 24-year-old sibling Abdur Jabbar, ABC News ...
HOUSTON, Texas (KTRK) -- As federal officials keep ... assisted in securing a perimeter around the property. Shamsud-Din Jabbar, 42, who allegedly plowed into crowds of New Orleans revelers ...
Shamsud-Din Jabbar grew up in Texas, joined the U.S. Army and eventually settled in Houston, where he spun up a real estate business and made $120,000 a year for one of the world’s largest consulting ...
Shamsud-Din Jabbar grew up in Texas, joined the U.S. Army and eventually settled in Houston, where he spun up a real estate business and made $120,000 a year for one of the world’s largest ...