Shawn Ryan interview unveils explosive Cybertruck bomber claims



A friend of Las Vegas Cybertruck bomber Matthew Livelsberger has come forward to reveal an email manifesto that Livelsberger sent to him. Retired U.S. Army officer Sam Shoemate requested an appearance on the Shawn Ryan podcast to unveil the manifesto.

Shoemate stated he contacted Ryan first because he was convinced the national news media would suppress the story and that the federal government might try to stop it. Ryan, courageously, immediately released the video of the conversation to the public.

Could it be that Livelsberger knew the information he was about to disclose would get him killed or put in prison for the rest of his life?

During the interview, Ryan mentioned his cell phone had been acting up before the interview and he was concerned that he was being surveilled. I can verify that the CIA and the FBI do this to American citizens and even have done it to me. Ryan said after the interview that he would disappear with his family for a few days for their safety.

Until now, the legacy news media’s reporting of the Jan. 1 incident outside the Trump International Hotel in Las Vegas has said nothing about the bomber’s motivation for the spectacular act that blessedly did far less damage than it might have.

Ryan showed a screenshot of the email as evidence.

According to Shoemate, Livelsberger emailed him a manifesto revealing he believed he was under surveillance by the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security because of the information he was about to reveal to the public. He claimed China and the United States have anti-gravity drone technology that poses a serious risk to our national security.

Livelsberger also wrote that he was exposing a cover-up of a U.S. airstrike in Afghanistan in 2019 that massacred a large number of civilians, including women and children. Livelsberger wrote this was the incident that pushed him to the limit.

Livelsberger also wrote that China has launched anti-gravity drones from submarines off the East Coast that are the “most dangerous threat to national security.” He claimed these drones, also deployed by the United States, possess stealth technology, can evade radar detection, and have an unlimited payload capacity that could be used for weapons deployment.

Below are the contents of the emails sent to Shoemate by Livelsberger:

In case I do not make it to my decision point or on to the Mexico border I am sending this now. Please do not release this until 1JAN and keep my identity private until then.

First off I am not under duress or hostile influence or control. My first car was a 2006 Black Ford Mustang V6 for verification.
What we have been seeing with "drones" is the operational use of gravitic propulsion systems powered aircraft by most recently China [on] the east coast, but throughout history, the US. Only we and China have this capability ...

China has been launching them from the Atlantic from submarines for years, but this activity recently has picked up. As of now, it is just a show of force and they are using it similar to how they used the balloon for SIGINT and ISR, which are also part of the integrated coms system. There are dozens of those balloons in the air at any given time.

The so what is because of the speed and stealth of these unmanned [aircraft], they are the most dangerous threat to national security that has ever existed. They basically have an unlimited payload capacity and can park it over the WH if they wanted. It's checkmate.

[The U.S. government] needs to give the history of this, how we are employing it and weaponizing it, how China is employing them and what the way forward is. China is poised to attack anywhere in the East Coast.

I've been followed for over a week now [by] likely Homeland or FBI, and they are looking to move on me and are unlikely going to let me cross into Mexico, but won't because they know I am armed and I have a massive [vehicle-borne improvised explosive device]. I've been trying to maintain a very visible profile and have kept my phone and they are definitely digitally tracking me.

I have knowledge of this program and also war crimes that were covered up during airstrikes in Nimruz province Afghanistan in 2019 by the admin, DoD, DEA, and CIA. I conducted targeting for these strikes of over 125 buildings (65 were struck because of CIVCAS) that killed hundreds of civilians in a single day. [U.S. Forces Afghanistan] continued strikes after spotting civilians on initial ISR, it was supposed to take 6 minutes and scramble all aircraft in CENTCOM. The UN basically called these war crimes, but the administration made them disappear. I was part of that cover-up with USFORA and Agent [Redacted] of the DEA. So I don't know if my abduction attempt is related to either. I worked with GEN Millers 10 staff on this as well as the response to Bala Murghab. AOB-S Commander at the time. [Redacted] can validate this.

You need to elevate this to the media so we avoid a world war because this is a mutually assured destruction situation.

For vetting my Linkedin is Matt Berg or Matthew Livelsberger, an active duty 18Z out of 1-10 my profile is public. I have an active TSSCI with UAP USAP access.

The FBI claimed, “Although this incident is more public and more sensational, it ultimately appears to be a tragic case of suicide involving a heavily decorated combat veteran who was struggling with PTSD and other issues.”

The American people have lost trust in these kinds of statements.

Could it be that Livelsberger knew the information he was about to disclose would get him killed or put in prison for the rest of his life? We may never know the answer.

Authorities looking at Trump hotel explosion as possible terrorist act, links to suspect in New Orleans massacre



Suspected jihadist Shamsud-Din Jabbar allegedly drove a pickup truck into a crowd of people Wednesday morning on Bourbon Street in New Orleans, claiming the lives of at least 15 victims.

Just hours later, an individual driving a Cybertruck rental loaded with fuel tanks and incendiary devices pulled up into the valet area outside the Trump International Hotel in Las Vegas. While the Cybertruck exploded right outside the hotel's front doors, the vehicle's design helped ensure that only the driver was killed by the blast.

Authorities are presently investigating whether the Las Vegas incident was a terrorist attack and have identified at least one thing the apparent New Year's Day attacks have in common besides their timing and vehicular nature.

Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Sheriff Kevin McMahill indicated during a press conference Wednesday that the Cybertruck arrived in Las Vegas around 7:30 a.m. on Wednesday, then drove up and down Las Vegas Boulevard for roughly an hour. Just before 8:40 a.m., the Cybertruck pulled into the valet area outside the Trump International Hotel, then detonated.

The truck's flatbed was loaded with gasoline canisters, camping fuel, and large firework mortars. Despite this combustive payload, the Cybertruck's design apparently saved lives.

Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department

"It looks like the exterior of that truck is completely intact as it sits there," said McMahill. "The fact that this was a Cybertruck really limited the damage that occurred inside of the valet because it had most of the blast go up through the truck and out."

Tesla CEO Elon Musk later noted on X, "The evil knuckleheads picked the wrong vehicle for a terrorist attack. Cybertruck actually contained the explosion and directed the blast upwards. Not even the glass doors of the lobby were broken."

An official briefed on the investigation confirmed to ABC News that the explosion was not the result of a lithium battery blast.

Seven people suffered minor injuries as a result of the blast. According to the LVMPD, two victims were briefly hospitalized but have since been released.

'Trying to see if we can say, "Hey, this is a terrorist attack."'

While McMahill was reluctant to confirm the identity of the driver, senior law enforcement sources told KOAA-TV that 37-year-old Army veteran Matthew Livelsberger of Colorado Springs rented the Cybertruck and was behind the wheel at the time. Armored vehicles and law enforcement agents in tactical gear were reported at the scene of one of Livelsberger's known addresses hours after the explosion.

The Daily Mail reported that Livelsberger served nearly 20 years in the Army, 18 of which he spent with Special Forces. While authorities have not confirmed whether the two knew each other, Livelsberger at one point served at the same military base as Jabbar, the now-deceased suspect in the New Orleans massacre whom President Joe Biden alleged Wednesday was inspired by ISIS. Jabbar similarly served in the Army — on active duty from 2007 through 2015 and then in the reserves from 2015 through 2020.

While it's unclear whether the driver of the Cybertruck knew or had anything to do with the suspect behind the New Orleans massacre, they both acquired their rentals from the same company.

McMahill indicated that the Cybertruck was rented from the rental company Turo's app in Colorado and its progress was confirmed by Tesla charging station data made available by Elon Musk. The sheriff suggested it was a "coincidence" that the truck used in the New Orleans attack was similarly rented through Turo.

Turo said in a statement, "It is with a heavy heart that we confirm that this morning's horrific attack in New Orleans and this afternoon's Tesla Cybertruck explosion in Las Vegas both involved vehicles rented on Turo."

"We do not believe that either renter had a criminal background that would have identified them as a security threat, and we are not currently aware of any information that indicates the two incidents are related," added the company.

The FBI is presently investigating the Cybertruck explosion through its Joint Terrorism Task Force and trying to determine whether it was a terrorist attack.

After confirming the identity of the driver, FBI Special Agent in Charge Jeremy Schwartz told reporters the task force's second objective is "to determine whether this was an act of terrorism or not."

"I know everyone's interested in that word, and trying to see if we can say, 'Hey, this is a terrorist attack.' That is our goal and that's what we're trying to do," said Schwartz.

Sheriff McMahill speculated about the apparent choice of target, stating, "It's a Tesla truck, and we know that Elon Musk is working with President-elect Trump, and it's the Trump Tower so there are obviously things to be concerned about there, and it's stuff we continue to look at."

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