Chilling new video shows NOLA terrorist loading up truck before attack

Doorbell footage shows the Bourbon Street terrorist unloading his rented pickup truck hours before using it to kill 15 people and wound at least 30.

Shamsud Din Jabbar, 42, rammed the vehicle, displaying an ISIS flag, into a crowd of New Year’s Eve revelers in New Orleans around 3:15 a.m. Wednesday.

Dressed in military gear and carrying bombs in the white, electric Ford F-150 Lightning, he mowed down pedestrians, then got out and shot more of them.

Jabbar rented the pickup in Houston on Turo and drove it to New Orleans on Tuesday evening, before checking into an Airbnb on Mandeville Street in St Roch.

Neighbor Michael Adasko discovered his Ring doorbell camera filmed the terrorist loading the F-150 into the house at 10:02 p.m.

The footage showed Jabbar lifting boxes from the bed of the pickup and carrying them in from the curbside parking lot.

Investigators said Jabbar brought parts for making improvised explosive devices and rented the Airbnb to assemble them for his rampage.

ATF Special Agent in Charge of the New Orleans Field Division Joshua Jackson said Thursday that the ATF was still combing through the rental home.

Shamsud Din Jabbar, 42, rammed the vehicle, flying the ISIS flag, into a crowd of New Year’s Eve revelers in New Orleans around 3:15 a.m. Wednesday.

Jabbar placed the explosives in the F-150 after assembling them and planted some in ice coolers around Bourbon Street that he intended to activate with a remote detonator, but they failed to detonate during the terrorist attack.

Minutes after the attack, a fire started in the Airbnb and engulfed the house. The cause of the fire is unclear.

Adasko told CNN that his neighbor called 911 around 4 a.m. and that if they hadn’t done so, “we could have died.”

“There are a lot of variables that make this scary. At 5:10 am. “I woke up to eight fire trucks putting out a fire in the Airbnb next door,” he said.

“We had smelled fire earlier in the evening but thought it was fireworks.”

Federal agents knocked on his door around 9 a.m. and he showed them the footage.

The FBI removed bomb-making materials from the two-bedroom, two-bathroom home near the French Quarter.

The footage showed Jabbar lifting boxes from the bed of the pickup and carrying them in from the curbside parking lot

The footage showed Jabbar lifting boxes from the bed of the pickup and carrying them in from the curbside parking lot

The driver who rammed into pedestrians celebrating the New Year in New Orleans, killing at least 15 people and injuring dozens, is dead after a shootout with police

The driver who rammed into pedestrians celebrating the New Year in New Orleans, killing at least 15 people and injuring dozens, is dead after a shootout with police

New Orleans police remove a bomb containment vessel from the building

New Orleans police remove a bomb containment vessel from the building

A total containment vessel was seen being moved away from the property at around 8pm on New Year’s Day, hours after authorities evacuated residents from the area.

The area is mainly rented out to tourists who travel to the area for the holiday period and now have no place to stay.

Authorities told one couple they “shouldn’t count on” regaining access to the property, closing a three-block radius.

The FBI was joined by special agents from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives and Homeland Security.

State Attorney General Liz Murrill told NBC News, “We know that these individuals rented the house and used it for that purpose (bomb making).”

The two-bedroom, two-bathroom property was renovated by property developer Oliver Doxater of Wysteria Properties.

The FBI confirmed there is ‘no definitive link’ between the terror attack in New Orleans and a CyberTruck bombing in Las Vegas

Deputy Christopher Raia said NOLA terror suspect Shamsud-Din Jabbar was a lone wolf.

“We do not believe at this time that anyone else is involved in this attack other than Shamsud-Din Jabbar, the subject of which you have already been briefed,” Raia said.

Jabbar served as the information technology team chief for the 82nd Airborne Division's 1st Brigade Combat Team during the Leaders Training Program rotation Nov. 16, 2013 at Fort Polk, Louisiana

Jabbar served as the information technology team chief for the 82nd Airborne Division’s 1st Brigade Combat Team during the Leaders Training Program rotation Nov. 16, 2013 at Fort Polk, Louisiana

1735851337 661 Chilling new video shows NOLA terrorist loading up truck before

The FBI’s new conclusion comes a day after a CyberTruck exploded outside a Trump International Hotel in Las Vegas, just hours after the deadly car attack.

The statement is a reversal of their earlier assessment that Jabbar likely had accomplices.

“As you know, there is also an FBI investigation in Las Vegas,” Raia said. ‘We follow up on all potential leads and do not rule everything out.

“However, at this time there is no definitive link between the attack here in New Orleans and the one in Las Vegas.

“And again, I’ll give an introduction as I close, I’ll preface everything with what I started with at the beginning, which is that this is very early in a study like this.”