FBI finds sulfuric acid in Harris County storage unit
The FBI and local Houston law enforcement were on the scene of a location believed to be associated with the suspect in the deadly New Orleans truck attack
FBI Houston confirms that a “court-authorized law enforcement activity” was conducted at a storage facility on Monday night in relation to the New Orleans attack on New Year's Day.
Officials said Wednesday afternoon they were securing a perimeter in north Houston in connection to the terrorist attack in New Orleans.
HOUSTON — While police and the Federal Bureau of Investigation continue their investigation into a terrorist act that killed at least 15 and injured more than 30 on New Year's Eve in New Orleans ...
The FBI in Houston did not elaborate more and referred to the FBI in New Orleans as the lead investigators. Investigators say Jabbar was "hellbent" on killing New Year's Day revelers. Initially ...
The FBI’s Houston office and the Harris County Sheriff’s Office are conducting law-enforcement activity near the intersection of Hugh Road and Crescent Peak Drive in north Houston, FBI Houston said in a post on X.
On Thursday morning, they said their search was completed. The FBI in Houston released the following update Wednesday night. "FBI Houston and the Harris County Sheriff’s Office are continuing a ...
Precursor chemicals” for making explosives were found at the home of terrorist Shamsud-Din Jabbar’s home in Houston, according to the FBI. Multiple news reports confirmed agents returned to Jabbar’s mobile home Friday to seek more evidence after first raiding it Thursday.
Outgoing FBI Director Christopher Wray says the bureau must remain independent, above the partisan fray and “committed to upholding the rule of law."
The FBI and the Harris County Sheriff's Office have concluded their search of a Houston property as part of their investigation into the deadly New Year's Day truck attack in New Orleans.
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — The first-ever U.S. Justice Department review of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre concluded Friday that while federal prosecution may have been possible a century ago there is no longer an avenue to bring a criminal case more than 100 years after one of the worst racial attacks in U.S. history.