Texas mass shooter Ndiaga Diagne had Iranian flag and photos of Islamic Republic leaders in his home: report

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The murderous gunman who shot up a Texas bar in a possible terrorist attack had an Iranian flag and photos of Islamic Republic leaders in his home, according to a report.

Senegalese national Ndiaga Diagne, 53, may have been motivated by the joint attack by Israel and the US when he pulled up to Buford’s Backyard Beer Garden in Austin on Sunday wearing a “Property of Allah” shirt and started shooting, killing two people and wounding 14 others, officials have said.

After Diagne was shot dead by Austin police officers, a search warrant executed at his home revealed an Iranian flag and pictures of Iranian leaders, sources with direct knowledge told CBS News.

A Quran was also found in Diagne’s car and he was also wearing an undershirt with the Iranian flag or other Iranian symbols, The Post previously revealed.


Ndiaga Diagne wearing a hoodie with "Property of Allah" and holding a weapon.
Suspected shooter Ndiaga Diagne was seen wearing a “Property of Allah” hoodie during the deadly rampage in Austin Sunday. X/@BillMelugin_

FBI Special Agent Alex Doran told reporters on Sunday that while authorities are working to determine the exact motivation for the mass shooting, there were “indicators on the subject and in his vehicle that indicate a potential nexus to terrorism.”

Diagne stopped his SUV in front of the bar and began shooting out his front window with a pistol, striking patrons on the front patio around 2 a.m., which was closing time for the popular nightspot, according to Austin Police Chief Lisa Davis.

He then parked his car, got out and began shooting at people walking by on the street with an assault rifle, the chief said.

Harrowing footage captured the moment gunshots rang out along the busy street.


Two police officers guard the scene of a shooting on West 6th Street in Austin, Texas.
Two police officers guard the scene of the shooting on West 6th Street in Austin, Texas. AP

Police confronted Diagne within less than a minute of the first gunshot and took him down at an intersection on 6th Street.

Two victims and the shooter died at the scene. First responders rushed 14 other patients to nearby hospitals, three of whom were last reported in critical condition.

Diagne, a former New York City resident, arrived in the US on March 13, 2000 on a tourist visa during the Clinton administration and became a lawful permanent resident when he married a US citizen in June 2006.

He then became a naturalized US citizen on April 5, 2013 around the start of former President Barack Obama’s second term, despite several arrests.

He was known to authorities as an emotionally disturbed person in both New York and Texas before Sunday’s bloody rampage, sources said.

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