Federal legislation enforcement is asking the general public to stay vigilant as they warn of potential copycat assaults just like these seen in New Orleans.
In a joint assertion from the FBI and the Division of Homeland Safety, officers requested the general public to report any suspicious exercise to legislation enforcement.
“The FBI and DHS are concerned about possible copycat or retaliatory attacks due to the persistent appeal of vehicle ramming as a tactic for aspiring violent extremist attackers. Previous attackers inspired by foreign terrorist organizations (FTOs) who have conducted vehicle attacks in the United States and abroad have used rented, stolen, and personally owned vehicles, which are easy to acquire,” they wrote.
“Some have used additional weapons, such as firearms and knives, to attack individuals after the vehicle has stopped. Additionally, attackers may attempt to conceal and pre-position improvised explosive devices (IEDs) to supplement a vehicle attack.”
The warning comes after Shamsud-Din Jabbar drove his automobile into pedestrians on Bourbon Avenue over the New Years vacation, killing 14 earlier than he later died in a shootout with police.
Jabbar has stated he was impressed by ISIS to hold out the assault. Along with renting a automobile, he was discovered to produce other weapons and in addition had positioned two bombs within the space that he may detonate remotely.
Each companies have beforehand warned of the dangers posed by lone wolf actors radicalized by terror teams, together with the issue of monitoring those that might want to perform lethal plots.
“You’re talking about guys like this, who radicalize not in years but in weeks, and whose method of attack is still very deadly but fairly crude,” FBI Director Christopher Wray stated throughout a Sunday evening look on CBS’s “60 Minutes.”
“And if you think about that old saying about connecting the dots, there are not a lot of dots out there to connect. And there’s very little time in which to connect them.”