NFL Hall of Famer Brett Favre expressed confusion and skepticism about the details surrounding the deadly New Year's Day events in New Orleans and Las Vegas.
In an X post Friday, Favre asked fans “what's going on” with me a terrorist attack New Orleans killed 14 and a Cybertruck bomb outside Trump Tower in Las Vegas killed another.
“What's up with the New Orleans story and the Trump Hotel? Too much information and hard to sift through to see what's real!” Favre wrote.
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Many of Favre's fans responded, sharing similar concerns.
“Whatever the FBI says, believe the opposite!” one user wrote.
One user responded, advising Favre and others to “ignore the media.”
“None of it. Take the event. Ignore the media,” the user wrote.
More details about the two attacks have emerged in recent days.
Shamsud-Din Jabbar, the man who plowed a rented truck into New Year's Eve revelers on New Orleans' Bourbon Street Wednesday, and Matthew Livelsberger, the man who witnessed the explosion of a Tesla Cybertruck outside the Trump International Hotel in Las Vegas hours later, both were military personnel present. He served at Fort Liberty and was deployed to Afghanistan in 2009, Fox News Digital previously reported.
Las Vegas, Clark County Sheriff Kevin McMahill said that although both men served in Afghanistan in 2009, any possible relationship is still under investigation.
“We have no evidence that they were in the same province in Afghanistan, in the same area or in the same facility,” McMahill said. “Also, something else is being investigated.”
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A security official told Fox News that there was no evidence based on their military service that the attacks were linked. While both men served at Fort Liberty, formerly Fort Bragg, they were there at different times. The North Carolina center has more than 50,000 service members.
The FBI released footage of the New Orleans attack showing Jabbar about an hour before he allegedly drove a rented Ford into a crowd. Bourbon Street Celebrating the attack authorities say was inspired by the Islamic State.
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Former Green Bay Packers quarterback Brett Favre speaks in front of Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump at a campaign rally at the Resch Center Oct. 30, 2024, Green Bay, Wis. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
More than 30 others were injured. Although it has previously investigated the possibility of accomplices in the attack, the FBI said Thursday that the bureau is confident that Jabbar acted alone.
The FBI found a black ISIS flag on Jabbar's rental truck used in the attack.
“This investigation has only been over 24 hours, and we have no indication that anyone else was involved in this attack other than Shamsud-Din Bahar Jabbar,” FBI Deputy Assistant Director Christopher Raia said. counterterrorism division of the FBI. headquarters said Thursday.
“The FBI is moving people and assets to this area across the region and across the country. Special agents in field offices across the country are assisting with potential aspects of this investigation and follow the lead. Additional teams of special agents, professional staff and victim experts are arriving to provide assistance to victims and their families.”
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