Doorbell video shows Austin mass shooting suspect Ndiaja Diani leaving apartment before deadly rampage

Video shows the newly acquired doorbell camera Suspect in Austin mass shooting in an apartment shortly before the deadly rampage.
In the clip He got it FOX 7, 53-year-old Ndiaja Diagne can be seen leaving an apartment in Del Valle, Texas, as captured on a nearby doorbell camera.
The time stamp on the video reads February 28, one day before the mass shooting.
The same neighbor also provided a video of FBI agents covering their camera moments earlier Diagne’s apartment was raided on 2 March.
The raid was related to the execution of a search warrant for an apartment linked to Diagne.
A day earlier, federal agents encountered residents of the Eastridge Apartments surrounding a complex unit at about 11:30 a.m., with an agent using a loudspeaker to tell anyone in Unit 813 to stay away from the windows, the outlet reported.
Shortly after, neighbors heard a noise they described as sounding like gunfire.
“Then we heard gunshots, and then we heard a grenade go off in the apartment. There were a lot of cars and the FBI with their guns out,” an unidentified resident told FOX 7.
Another resident explained how they encountered armed agents outside their apartment when they returned home.
“I looked out the window from the bathroom, and I just saw them at the house, and they had a car on the grass there. They had K-9 rifles waiting for them too, and they had rifles outside the gate,” Alex Skye said.
According to Police Chief Lisa Davis, the gunman — a 53-year-old naturalized U.S. citizen born in Senegal and living in Pflugerville — “set up his flashers; He rolled down his window and began shooting a gun from his car windowsHe hit the bar patrons who were in the courtyard and those who were in front of the bar.
After the initial shooting, the gunman drove west from Sixth Street to Wood Street, parked his car and got out carrying a rifle while continuing to shoot pedestrians without ever entering the bar.
The police then shot and killed him at the scene.
FBI since then The shooting was classified as a possible terrorist act.
“It’s obviously still very early in the process to determine an exact motive, but there were indications around this subject and in his vehicle that indicated a possible connection to terrorism,” Alex Duran, acting special agent in charge of the FBI’s San Antonio field office, said at a news conference on Sunday.
“Again, it is still too early to make a decision on this. That is why we are investigating the matter closely with our partners at the Austin Police Department,” Duran added.
In addition, the FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force was also deployed.
He added: “At this stage, we are ready to say that it is likely a terrorist act.”
At least two additional victims remain in critical condition, according to authorities.



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