Speeding truck seen in New Orleans is ‘tactic of choice among terrorists’: expert
Surveillance footage from Bourbon Street shared with Fox News Digital shows terror suspect Shamsud-Din Jabbar speeding his electric Ford F-150 Lightning pickup truck toward a crowd of New Year’s revelers, who narrowly escapes the fast-moving vehicle, around 3:15 a.m. on Jan. 1.
Authorities fatally shot Jabbar after he drove his vehicle through the crowd, killing 14 people and opening fire on police in what officials described as a terrorist attack.
“A 5,000-pound vehicle going at a high rate of speed in an urban area is utterly devastating. And it’s very clear the trend is that this is becoming — this tactic of choice among terrorists globally, because recently we’ve seen a proliferation of these,” Paul Mauro, Fox News contributor and former NYPD inspector, told Fox News Digital.
Mauro added that police departments across the nation have shifted their standard operating procedures because “it’s no longer enough to wait for the feds to do their counterterrorism.”
He said “electric vehicles in general are so quiet” that Jabbar may have made the conscious decision to rent an electric vehicle for the purpose of taking more victims by surprise.
A manager at Krystal, a fast-food restaurant on Bourbon Street, shared the surveillance video with Fox Digital, and said New Year’s celebrations had been going relatively smoothly in the French Quarter compared to prior years. Visitors were having fun, but not being overly rambunctious, he recalled.
Multiple business employees located near the entrance of Bourbon Street told Fox News Digital that authorities installed temporary barriers to block traffic at certain street entrances in the French Quarter around Christmastime as the city planned to repair and upgrade its permanent barriers.
However, the barrier situated at the intersection of Canal and Bourbon streets was not upright on New Year’s Eve, meaning vehicles could drive over the flattened barricade and onto Bourbon Street from Canal Street. A video shows Jabbar driving the rented pickup truck off Canal Street and around a police vehicle blockade at the entrance of Bourbon Street before plowing into revelers.
“The lesson is, even if you take prophylactic steps, you can’t secure a very large event 100%, and we just have to accept that. Now, that said … we do have to accept the fact that they made mistakes,” Mauro said. “You have to ask yourselves: If you have New Orleans New Year’s — which I actually have been to, and it is a zoo, you get tons of people — then you have the Sugar Bowl, then you have the Super Bowl, then you have Mardis Gras, who made the decision to decide to remove the barriers that they had for upgrading?”
This is an excerpt from an article by Audrey Conklin.
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