Spook Training in Question with New Orleans and Las Vegas Terrorists

The terrorist attacks that occurred in New Orleans, LA and Las Vegas, NV, are tragic. How the families cope with such devastating loss is impossible to comprehend. But getting legitimate and accurate information about the deadly attacks may provide some comfort and closure. Forty-eight hours into the investigation one can only say that the status is fluid.

It’s way too early to know if these two terrorists were mentally challenged and on some weird cocktail of psychiatric drugs or if the attacks were something more nefarious. But some information seems so strange and coincidental that one cannot help but wonder whether the attacks go deeper than law enforcement will be willing to share. So, let’s consider the two attacks and what we know two days out.

In the early morning hours of New Year’s Day, 42-year-old Shamsud-Din Jabbar travelled to New Orleans, driving a Ford F-150 into holiday revelers killing 15 (and himself) and injuring 30 others. That same day, just a few hours later, 37-year-old Matthew Livelsberger drove a Tesla Cybertruck to Las Vegas where it exploded in front of the Trump Hotel main entry doors, killing himself and injuring seven. On the surface, it would appear that these two events are unrelated. But there are a few nagging coincidences that law enforcement must address.

First, both men served in the U.S. Army. Din Jabbar served in the Army from 2006 to 2015 and had deployed to Afghanistan in 2009. Livelsberger was Army “special operations” active duty and home on leave from Germany and who served in Afghanistan at the same time as Din Jabbar. It is reported that both men also were stationed at Ft. Bragg in North Carolina at the same time.

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Las Vegas Cybertruck Bomber Reached Out to Ex Girlfriend Before Vegas Bombing – He Seemed “Playful”

Green Beret Master Sergeant Matthew Livelsberger, who reportedly drove a rented Tesla Cybertruck up in front of the Las Vegas Trump International before first killing himself and then detonating a bed full of explosives, had an interesting exchange with an ex-girlfriend prior to the Vegas bombing.

In the text message exchange, initially reported by The Gazette, the Green Beret Master Sergeant texted his ex-girlfriend about the thrill of renting the Cybertruck.

According to screenshots, Livelsberger wrote, “I rented a Tesla cybertruck[.] It’s the shit[.]”

In the next text message, a moment later, he told his ex, “I’m building drones in my new position[.] you would love it” at 9:06am.

There is no date visible in the text, but the ex-girlfriend, Alicia Arritt, said the exchange took place on Sunday from Denver, according to text screenshots.  She described his attitude as “playful” in nature.

He then sent two photos of the Cybertruck from a parking lot before saying, “I feel like Batman or halo,” likely referring to the popular X-Box video Halo and the warthog vehicle that the main character, Spartan 117, is often driving around in.

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Livelsberger Family Question Narrative – Says He Was HUGE Trump Supporter and “Would Have been Able to Make a More Sophisticated Bomb” – After He Allegedly “Shot Himself” PRIOR to Blowing Up CyberTruck

This is interesting.
The family of Matthew Livelsberger are starting to speak out about the Tesla explosion at Trump Tower on Sunday.

And the official story is starting to not make sense.

As reported earlier at The Gateway Pundit, the perpetrator behind the shocking Cybertruck bombing at Trump Tower Las Vegas has been identified as 37-year-old Matthew Livelsberger of Colorado Springs, Colorado.

Senior law enforcement sources confirmed to KOAA news outlet that Livelsberger was the driver of the Cybertruck used in the attack.

The original reports went like this: Authorities believe the blast was triggered by a detonation system “controlled by Livelsberger,” who “died in the attack.”

So hours after the Las Vegas explosion – the same FBI (the same FBI that lied about the NOLA New Year’s Eve terrorist, Shamsud Din Jabbar – immediately confirmed that Livelsberger “died in the bomb blast” at the Trump Tower.

How did they know he was not dead already?

Later today we found out that Livelsberger “shot himself” before his rental Cybertruck exploded.

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Mystery Over Man Behind Cybertruck Explosion Being a Trump Supporter

Mystery has deepened behind the motivation of the elite soldier who drove a Tesla Cybertruck that exploded outside the Trump Hotel in Las Vegas after it was revealed that he was a Trump supporter.

Authorities say 37-year-old Alan Livelsberger rented the vehicle more than 800 miles away before traveling to Nevada on the morning of the blast.

Livelsberger, who served in both the Army and National Guard and was a decorated Special Forces Intelligence Sergeant, apparently shot himself in the head before the explosion.

“I’m comfortable calling it a suicide with a bombing that occurred immediately after,” Sheriff McMahill said during Thursday’s press conference.

The incident has taken on an even more bizarre dimension after it was revealed Livelsberger was a Trump supporter.

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Elon: “Evil Knuckleheads Picked The Wrong Vehicle For A Terrorist Attack”

Responding to the deliberate detonation of what appears to be rudimentary explosive devices in a Cybertruck outside a Trump hotel in Las Vegas Wednesday, Tesla owner Elon Musk noted that the vehicle effectively contained the brunt of the blast and that the attacker couldn’t have picked a worse vehicle if inflicting maximum damage was the intention.

Las Vegas Sheriff Kevin McMahill announed during a press conference, “I also would like you to pay attention to, on that video, as you see that it looks like the exterior of that truck is completely intact as it sits there.”

“The fact that this was a Cybertruck really limited the damage that occurred inside of the valet because it had most of the blast go up through the truck and out,” he added.

The Sheriff further noted that “the front glass doors at the Trump Hotel were not even broken by that blast, which they were parked directly in front of.”

Musk asserted that “The evil knuckleheads picked the wrong vehicle for a terrorist attack. Cybertruck actually contained the explosion and directed the blast upwards. Not even the glass doors of the lobby were broken.”

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10 Questions We Should All Be Asking About The New Year’s Day Terror Attacks

While we are slowly getting some answers from law enforcement today, there are still a number of bigger picture questions that need to be addressed.

As Michael Snyder highlights, via The Economic Collapse blog, our “new” golden era of “peace and safety” has been very rudely interrupted by the “old” problem of Islamic terror.

 Of course the truth is that it is a problem that never went away.  

There were dozens of major terror attacks in 2024, but most of the population is not going to pay attention unless something happens within our own borders.  Sadly, everyone is paying attention now.

Very early on New Year’s Day, a 42-year-old nut named Shamsud-Din Jabbar rammed a truck into a large crowd on Bourbon Street in New Orleans.  We are being told that 15 people are dead and dozens more are injured

A man intentionally drove a pickup truck into a crowd of revelers on Bourbon Street in New Orleans’ French Quarter early on New Year’s Day, killing at least 15 people and injuring dozens of others, officials said.

A black ISIS flag was flying from the truck’s rear bumper, and the attack is being investigated as an act of terrorism, the Federal Bureau of Investigation said.

The man driving the vehicle has been identified as Shamsud-Din Jabbar, 42, a U.S. citizen from Texas, the FBI said.

So was this the end, or is this just the beginning?

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Suspect in Las Vegas Cybertruck Bombing Was US Army Green Beret

The suspect in Wednesday’s Tesla Cybertruck bombing that occurred outside a Trump hotel in Las Vegas has been identified as 37-year-old Matthew Alan Livelsberger, an active duty US Army Green Beret.

Livelsberger was identified as the person who rented the Cybertruck, and his IDs and credit cards were found in the vehicle, but the body was burned beyond recognition, and authorities say they’re still waiting on a DNA test to confirm his identity.

The Cybertruck was blown up using firework mortars and gas canisters, a crude explosive for someone with Livelsberger’s military experience to use. The body had a gunshot wound to the head, which authorities say was self-inflicted. Since Cybertrucks can be self-driving, some have speculated he could have been dead before arriving at the Trump hotel if the bomb was detonated using a timer.

Las Vegas Sheriff Kevin McMahill said he was “comfortable calling it a suicide with a bombing that occurred immediately after.” No one else was killed in the blast, and seven people nearby sustained minor injuries.

The bombing occurred just a few hours after Shamsud-Din Jabbar, another US Army veteran, plowed a truck into a crowd in New Orleans, killing 15. The FBI has said there’s no “definitive link” between the two incidents, though there are some similarities.

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Cybertruck bomber Matthew Livelsberger’s stunned family say he ‘loved Trump and the Army’

The stunned family of suspected Las Vegas Cybertruck bomber Matthew Livelsberger say the Army veteran was a ‘big Trump supporter’ who loved his time in the military. 

It comes as more details are revealed about Livelsberger, a long serving married Green Beret who was on leave from active duty when he carried out the attack outside Donald Trump‘s Las Vegas hotel. 

His uncle Dean Livelsberger told The Independent that his nephew was ‘100 percent a patriot’, and described him as a ‘Rambo-type.’ 

‘He used to have all patriotic stuff on Facebook, he was 100 percent loving the country,’ he continued. 

‘He loved Trump, and he was always a very, very patriotic soldier, a patriotic American. It’s one of the reasons he was in Special Forces for so many years. It wasn’t just one tour of duty.’ 

He added that the amateurish construction of the explosive device in the Cybertruck was curious to him, as he knew Matthew to be a ‘very skilled warrior’ who ‘would’ve been able to make a more sophisticated explosive.’ 

‘He was what you might call a ‘supersoldier.’ If you ever read about the things he was awarded, and the experience he had, some of it doesn’t make sense, when he had the skills and ability to make something more, let’s say, ‘efficient,” Dean said. 

‘His skills were enormous from what he had been taught in the military.’ 

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Suspects in Vegas explosion, New Orleans attack served at same Army base, sources say

The Colorado Springs resident suspected of detonating a Tesla Cybertruck in front of a Las Vegas hotel and the Texas man accused of driving a pickup truck into a crowd on Bourbon Street in New Orleans served at the same military base, sources told Scripps News Denver.

Although sources said officials were investigating the link as a possible connection between the two New Year’s Day attacks, the FBI’s Christopher Raia told reporters that it could not establish a link between the two incidents.

Matthew Livelsberger is accused of renting a Cybertruck in Colorado Springs, driving it to Nevada and packing it with firework mortars and gas cans before exploding it in front of the Trump International Hotel in Vegas Wednesday morning, killing himself and injuring seven others. Shamsud-Din Jabbar is suspected of plowing through a crowd of New Year’s revelers in the French Quarter hours earlier, killing at least 14 and injuring dozens more in an attack that sent shockwaves through a famous New Year’s destination the morning of a scheduled College Football Playoff game.

Both men were confirmed to be Army veterans in the aftermath of the attacks – both of which were being investigated as possible acts of terrorism.

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Cybertruck Trump Hotel Bomber Was Dead from Gunshot to Head BEFORE Vehicle Detonated

The man suspected of carrying out a cybertruck bomb attack outside of Donald Trump’s hotel in Las Vegas was reportedly dead from a gunshot wound before the explosion happened, police claim.

At a press conference Thursday, Las Vegas police revealed they discovered via the coroner’s office that suspected bomber Matthew Livelsberger, a former US Army veteran, “had sustained a gunshot wound to the head prior to the detonation of the vehicle.”

“One of the handguns was found at his feet inside of the vehicle,” police added.

The detail raises several questions, as highlighted by a keen X user.

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