NFL legend Brett Favre asks big question after New Orleans and Trump hotel attacks

NFL Hall of Famer Brett Favre has cast doubt on the deadly attacks in New Orleans and Las Vegas amid his own confusion over the incidents.

New Year’s Eve revelry quickly turned to terror Wednesday when a U.S. Army veteran drove a truck into the party crowd on New Orleans’ infamous Bourbon Street, killing 14 and injuring at least 35.

Hours later, Matthew Livelsberger blew up a Tesla Cybertruck outside the Trump International Hotel in Las Vegas, injuring seven victims in the attack. Livelsberger, 37, shot himself in the head when the improvised explosive devices he placed around him exploded, leaving his body charred beyond recognition.

In the wake of the devastating attacks, Favre, a former Super Bowl-winning quarterback, expressed skepticism to his followers on X, formerly known as Twitter.

“What’s going on with the New Orleans and Trump Hotel story? A lot of information and hard to sift through to see what’s real!’ wrote the former Green Bay Packers star.

Many of his followers seemed to share Favre’s confusion, with one claiming that “the FBI is covering it up as best they can.”

NFL Hall of Famer Brett Favre has cast doubt on the deadly attacks in New Orleans and Las Vegas

In the aftermath of the devastating attacks, Favre expressed skepticism among his followers about X

In the aftermath of the devastating attacks, Favre expressed skepticism among his followers about X

Another claimed that ‘they’, who appear to refer to national authorities, want to confuse the public.

‘If you find out (sic), lmk please!!! My brain can’t handle it anymore after this week has gone by,” one stunned social media user pleaded.

“Officials say the two attacks are unrelated, but the two boys were former soldiers who served together at Fort Bragg in the past,” another claimed.

Shamsud-Din Jabbar, 42, a U.S. citizen born and raised in Texas, carried out the deadly attack in New Orleans.

Meanwhile, Livelsberger was identified by law enforcement sources as the bomber in Wednesday’s attack in Las Vegas.

He served in the military for more than 19 years, including 18 years in the Special Forces, according to his LinkedIn profile. His current role was listed as Remote and Autonomous Systems Manager, where he had only been working for three months.

Law enforcement sources revealed that Livelsberger had previously served at the same military base as New Orleans terrorist Jabbar. Police cannot confirm whether the two knew each other.

Both Army Vet Jabbar and Green Beret Livelsberger received training at Fort Liberty, the nation’s largest base, formerly known as Fort Bragg, in North Carolina.

An explosive blast killed one person and injured another six at the Trump Hotel in Las Vegas on Wednesday

An explosive blast killed one person and injured another six at the Trump Hotel in Las Vegas on Wednesday

Fourteen people were killed after a driver rammed into the large group at high speed in New Orleans

Fourteen people were killed after a driver rammed into the large group at high speed in New Orleans

An official told the Associated Press that there is no overlap in their assignments at the base, which has a population of about 47,000 active-duty soldiers and is home to multiple Army special operations units.

DailyMail.com sent a list of detailed questions to Fort Liberty, including whether they had opened an investigation into the men’s time there, but was referred to the Pentagon.

The Pentagon also did not answer specific questions from DailyMail.com about the two men’s time at Fort Liberty. Instead, they made an earlier statement about the suspects’ military credentials.

“Due to the ongoing investigation, we will not provide additional information at this time,” the Pentagon said.

Las Vegas Clark County Sheriff Kevin McMahill said that although both men served in Afghanistan in 2009, possible links between the two are still under investigation.

“We don’t have any evidence that they were in the same province in Afghanistan, in the same location or in the same unit,” McMahill said via Fox News. “Something else still under investigation.”

Vegas bomber Matthew Livelsberger

New Orleans forward Shamsud-Din Jabbar

Vegas bomber Matthew Livelsberger (left) and New Orleans forward Shamsud-Din Jabbar (right) both served at the same US military base in North Carolina

Initially, reports pointed to a possible link between the two, as both attackers were military personnel who rented cars through the Turo app before unleashing the carnage.

However, the FBI has said veteran Jabbar likely acted alone when, inspired by ISIS, he drove a pickup truck into a crowd of New Year’s celebrants in New Orleans’ French Quarter.

Christopher Raia, the deputy assistant director of the FBI’s counterterrorism division, emphasized that there is no evidence of a link between the attack in New Orleans and Wednesday’s explosion of a Tesla Cybertruck filled with explosives outside Trump’s Las Vegas hotel.

Officials are working to determine a possible motive for Livelsberger’s actions in Vegas.