XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, free.tim.walz.deployment.run.run.run.away, or.politics
XPost: sac.politics
Authorities have identified the driver of the Cybertruck that exploded in
front of the Trump hotel in Las Vegas as 37-year-old Master Sgt. Matthew
Alan Livelsberger. In a news briefing Thursday afternoon, police say they
still don't have 100 percent confirmation because he was "burned beyond recognition" in the Jan. 1 blast. They're awaiting DNA tests to confirm
his identity.
Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Sheriff Kevin McMahill says Livelsberger sustained a gunshot wound to the head prior to the Cybertuck detonating; investigators believe it was self inflicted.
Officials found several items in the vehicle including multiple firearms, fireworks, a military ID, an iPhone and several credit cards. The FBI and
local law enforcement officials are still looking for a motive.
Livelsberger was an active-duty Special Operations soldier with the U.S.
Army. Officials noted similarities with 42-year-old Shamsud-Din Jabbar,
the man who drove a pickup truck onto the sidewalk in New Orleans, killing
at least 14 and injuring dozens more on New Year's Day. McMahill said both
men served at Fort Bragg in North Carolina, though there's no indication
they served in the same unit. They also both served in Afghanistan in
2009, and they both used the rental car app Turo to rent the vehicles used
in these attacks. McMahill said details on additional parallels are
unknown. Law enforcement and intelligence officials are investigating any potential connection between the two incidents.
Livelsberger served in the active-duty Army from January 2006 to March
2011. He then joined the National Guard from March 2011 to July 2012,
followed by the Army Reserve from July 2012 to December 2012.
U.S. Army Special Operations Command confirmed that Livelsberger was on approved leave at the time of his death.
On Wednesday, Las Vegas police said that crews pulled gasoline canisters,
camp fuel canisters and large firework mortars from the back of the
Cybertruck. The explosion, which was caught on video, also injured seven people.
Police said the Cybertruck was rented in Colorado. Authorities were able
to trace the vehicle through Tesla charging stations to see that it
arrived in Las Vegas about an hour before the explosion. Authorities
called the incident "isolated."
Jeremy Schwartz, acting special agent in charge of the FBI in Las Vegas,
said the agency was working closely with area law enforcement to learn
more about the explosion. The FBI's Joint Terrorism Task Force was working
to determine whether the explosion was an act of terrorism.
A source familiar with Livelsberger's background who was not authorized to speak publicly on the matter tells NPR's Tom Bowman that Livelsberger was deployed five times to Afghanistan on combat missions. He had not been
deployed for the past 12 months.
Livelsberger was awarded a Bronze Star for valor, an Army commendation for valor, as well as a combat infantry badge, the source said.
Correction
Jan. 2, 2025
The Jan. 1 truck attack in New Orleans killed at least 14 people, not 15
as a previous version of this story said.
https://www.npr.org/2025/01/02/g-s1-40854/tesla-cybertruck-explosion-las-
vegas
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