Suspects in Vegas explosion, New Orleans attack served at same Army base, sources tell Denver7 Investigates
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, multiple sources told Denver7 Investigates.
Authorities were investigating the link as a possible connection between the two New Year's Day attacks, those sources said. There was belief Thursday morning that the two men overlapped but there was not yet evidence that they were assigned together or knew each other, according to an official briefed on the investigation who spoke to ABC News.
In a Thursday morning press briefing, FBI officials in New Orleans said there was "no definitive link" between the two events.
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 15 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. Late Wednesday, multiple informed sources told Denver7 Chief Investigator Tony Kovaleski of the link between the two suspects' military service.
Denver7 Investigates has learned that the suspects in the Las Vegas Tesla explosion and the New Orleans truck rampage on New Year's Day both served at the same military base.
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