It all started with a recent social media post asking the public’s help in reporting gangs. But FOX5 learned from Assistant Special Agent in Charge, Jeremy Schwartz with the FBI Las Vegas they’re getting harder to spot in the valley amid a rise in gang activity.
A decorated US Army Green Beret who died in a New Year’s Day explosion outside the Trump International Hotel in Las Vegas was suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder and had no apparent ties to terrorism,
Las Vegas police identified Matthew Alan Livelsberger as the driver of the Cybertruck who died in the New Year's Day bombing.
At a Friday press conference in Las Vegas, police confirmed the identity of the driver of a rented Tesla Cybertruck that exploded on New Year’s Day outside of the Trump International Hotel Las Vegas as Matthew Alan Livelsberger. A former Green Beret, Livelsberger took his own life at the scene, according to police.
The suspected driver of the Tesla Cybertruck that exploded outside the Trump International Hotel in Las Vegas on New Year's Day used popular chatbot ChatGPT to plan the blast, officials told reporters on Tuesday.
Las Vegas police said a person inside the Cybertruck died and that the vehicle contained gasoline canisters and "large mortar fireworks."
A potential link was just one thread being pulled by officials a day after 14 people were killed when a man plowed a pickup truck flying an ISIS flag through New Year’s Day revelers on Bourbon Street in New Orleans.
FBI officials on Thursday also said they now believe New Orleans attack suspect Shamsud-Din Jabbar acted alone.
A driver who authorities say exploded a Tesla Cybertruck outside the Trump International Hotel in Las Vegas last week used artificial intelligence to plan the blast, according to the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department.
The FBI and Las Vegas Police Department, along with other agencies, are continuing to investigate and determine what led the person of interest, 37-year-old Matthew Livelsberger, an active-duty U ...
“At this point, there is no definitive link between the attack here in New Orleans and the one in Las Vegas,” said Christopher Raia, deputy assistant director of the FBI’s counterterrorism ...