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Chemical used for explosives found in Texas storage locker linked to New Orleans attacker, authorities say

Bottles of sulfuric acid were found in a unit northwest of Houston during a search by the FBI and the Harris County Sheriff's Office.
The FBI investigates the area on Orleans St and Bourbon Street
The FBI investigates the area on Orleans and Bourbon streets by St. Louis Cathedral in the French Quarter where a suspicious package was detonated after a person drove a truck into a crowd on Bourbon Street on Jan. 1. Matthew Hinton / AP

A common chemical used for explosives was discovered in a Texas storage locker linked to the Army veteran who killed 14 people and injured more than two dozen others when he plowed into New Year’s revelers in New Orleans, law enforcement officials said Tuesday.

The bottles of sulfuric acid were discovered in a cooler in a unit northwest of Houston during an overnight search by the FBI and the Harris County Sheriff’s Office, officials with the FBI’s Houston field office said.

Sulfuric acid is widely used and commercially available, and it can easily be combined with other chemicals to make explosives. The FBI did not provide additional details about what the attacker, Shamsud-Din Jabbar, may have planned to use the sulfuric acid for.

FBI officials have said that Jabbar, who lived in Houston and died in a firefight with authorities, left two improvised explosive devices in New Orleans that did not detonate.

It is not clear why the bombs, which the FBI said were most likely made of a common explosive known as RDX, did not explode. Security video showed Jabbar placing the devices along Bourbon Street before the attack, authorities have said.

Authorities also believe Jabbar set fire to the short-term rental home in New Orleans where he stayed in an effort to destroy evidence. Bomb-making materials and what officials suspect was a silencer were found at the house.

Law enforcement officials have described the attack as an act of terrorism that was “100% inspired by ISIS,” the Islamic State terrorist group, and carried out by Jabbar alone.

Jabbar, who drove to New Orleans from Houston in a rental truck, recorded Facebook videos along the way professing his support for the group and saying he had previously planned on hurting family members and friends but changed his focus because he believed the news media would not focus on the “war between the believers and the disbelievers,” Christopher Raia, deputy assistant director of the FBI’s counterterrorism division, said at a briefing last week.