HOUSTON — The terrorist who killed 15 people when he plowed his truck down crowded Bourbon Street in New Orleans was an American-born military veteran who was living in a run-down trailer park where he kept sheep and goats in the yard — just blocks away from the local mosque.
Authorities say Shamsud-Din Jabbar, 42, from Houston, had an ISIS flag strapped to the rented Ford F-150 Lightning EV truck he used to carry out an act of premeditated terror on New Year’s Day.
Shamsud Din Jabbar was a US-born military veteran who went from success to a squalid Houston trailer park where sheep roamed his yard.
Jabbar served active duty from March 2007 until January 2015 and was a reservist from January 2015 until July 2020.
He left the service at the rank of staff sergeant, according to the Army.
Follow the latest on the terror attack on New Orleans’ Bourbon Street:
- New Orleans terror attack live updates: Suspect pictured, ISIS flag found in vehicle
- Killer driver Shamsud Din Jabbar seen in first photo after he mowed down dozens of New Year’s revelers in New Orleans
- New Year’s reveler witnessed ‘twisted, horribly disfigured’ bodies strewn on sidewalk: ‘Dead right in front of us’
- Barriers intended to block terror attacks on Bourbon Street were removed for overhaul in November
But when he carried out the terror attack — one of the deadliest since 9/11 — Jabbar lived in a squalid trailer park on the outskirts of Houston that is home to mostly Muslim immigrants.
Geese, chickens, and sheep roamed freely in Jabbar’s yard when The Post visited hours after the attack.
One neighbor told The Post she spoke only Urdu, Pakistan’s national language.
The neighborhood is also within walking distance of the local mosque, Masjid Bilal — where no one answered the telephone on Wednesday.
Law enforcement sources told The Post that they found videos Jabbar made where he referenced the Quran — Islam’s holy text.
Jabbar traveled to Egypt for 10 days last year, officials told the Post.
By mid-afternoon the feds swooped in — kicking The Post and other journalists out of the area and cordoning it off.
Dozens of police vehicles swarmed the neighborhood, including an armored, military-style truck.
Francois Venegas described Jabbar as a “simple person” who kept to himself, though they would occasionally exchange words on the street.
He had also been divorced twice, and the failed marriages apparently left him in financial ruin.
Jabbar’s first wife sued him for child support payments in 2012, court records show.
Amid his second divorce in 2022, he said he had racked up more than $16,000 in credit card debt paying court fees and expenses for a second home, according to an email to his ex-wife’s lawyer viewed by the Times.
His first wife, Nakedra Jabbar, has since remarried, and she and her new husband were cooperating with investigators, her husband’s father, Nelson Marsh Sr., told the New York Post.
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