- The Washington Times - Saturday, January 4, 2025

FBI agents say the bureau’s initial response to the New Year’s Day terrorist massacre in New Orleans’ French Quarter was disastrous and another reason the Senate can’t move fast enough to confirm President-elect Donald Trump’s nominee to run the agency.

Several agents who spoke on the condition of anonymity said the FBI failed to execute a comprehensive counterterrorism plan when Shamsud-Din Jabbar of Texas, an Army veteran, rammed a pickup truck carrying an ISIS flag into New Year’s Eve revelers, killing 14 and wounding dozens.

They said the top FBI official on the scene broke with decorum and that the bureau failed to follow basic procedures.

Agents wondered why Lyonel Myrthil, the special agent in charge of the New Orleans FBI office, did not appear to be on duty at the time of the attack despite what should have been a heightened alert for New Year’s Eve celebrations and the college football championship, the Sugar Bowl, scheduled at the city’s Superdome on New Year’s Day.

The agents blamed poor leadership by outgoing FBI Director Christopher A. Wray and Deputy Director Paul Abbate.

Mr. Abbate is poised to become acting director after Mr. Wray resigns, which he said he will do before Mr. Trump’s Jan. 20 inauguration.

“They need to go right now, not only Wray, but Abbate needs to go. This is awful. This is embarrassing. Kash Patel is the person to have in there,” said an agent, referring to Mr. Trump’s nominee for FBI director. “He needs to come right now, right away, because these people have to leave.”

The New Orleans FBI office sent Alethea Duncan, assistant special agent in charge, to the first press conference after the attack.

Wearing khakis, a blue polo shirt and a nose ring, Ms. Duncan immediately contradicted New Orleans Mayor LaToya Cantrell, who said at the press conference that her city was “impacted by a terrorist attack.”

Ms. Duncan stepped forward after the city’s police chief spoke and said, “This is not a terrorist event. What it is right now is there were improvised explosive devices that were found, and we are working on confirming if it is viable or not.”

Hours later, the FBI declared that the attack was being investigated as a terrorist incident.

Rank-and-file FBI agents were taken aback by Ms. Duncan’s presentation and comments.

“The new FBI management has to put in basic decorum rules because the bureau should look like the ‘Men in Black,’ that they’re all uniform — that they’re transparent,” an FBI agent said.

He said the public should “see the bureau, not somebody with a ring in their nose. Who the hell would go on TV with a ring in their nose?” another agent said. “Who the hell would ever say it’s not a terrorist event when there’s an ISIS flag flying on the back of a truck? They call that a clue.”

“You have two major events going on — the Sugar Bowl and New Year’s Eve — and the SAC is out of town. That’s why she is out there,” said another FBI agent. “They left nobody in charge.”

Another agent expressed no surprise at Ms. Duncan’s assessment because the attack didn’t fit the FBI leadership’s current definition of terrorism.

“It ain’t terrorism unless they have a MAGA hat on. For the last three years, all of the new agents, that’s all they know. It’s going after the right-wing or Trump supporters,” the agent said. “This is endemic with the headquarters.”

The agent added, “This is what happens when all you do are Jan. 6 cases.”

Other agents were perplexed as to why Jabbar’s residence was left accessible to the public, including reporters from the New York Post and ABC News 13, after an FBI search.

The FBI and Harris County Sheriff’s Office searched Jabbar’s home on Wednesday. Officers arrived at about 3 p.m., and the FBI said agents left at 7:50 a.m. on Thursday.

Law enforcement reportedly found precursor chemicals that could be used in explosives.

ABC News 13 reported on Thursday that the front door to his mobile home was left open and the frame was barely connected to the structure.

“You can’t search a house and then just leave it open. You have to secure it to protect the things from third parties. They didn’t do that,” one of the FBI agents said.

“They went and did a search warrant, they left inventory, and then it looks like they let the reporter in, but what it appears to be is that the FBI didn’t secure the residence after the search warrant as they’re supposed to,” he said. “They failed basic parts of a search warrant.”

The Washington Times reached out to the FBI headquarters for comment.

• Kerry Picket can be reached at kpicket@washingtontimes.com.

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