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Officials investigating terrorism-related event after driver rammed car into Nevada power substation

By Alaa Elassar, Bill Kirkos, CNN

(CNN) — A driver is dead after he rammed a vehicle through the gate of a power substation in Boulder City, Nevada, on Thursday in what authorities are investigating as a terrorism-related event, according to the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department.

The driver, who was found with a self-inflicted gunshot wound, has been identified as 23-year-old Dawson Maloney of Albany, New York, Sheriff Kevin McMahill said during a news conference on Friday.

Evidence recovered during the investigation included multiple books related to extremist ideologies — spanning right- and left-wing extremism, environmental extremism, white supremacy and anti-government beliefs — as well as explosive materials and components, according to McMahill.

Maloney had recently been reported missing out of New York and had communicated with family members before the incident, making statements referencing self-harm and suggesting he intended to commit an act that would put him “on the news,” McMahill said. Maloney had also messaged his mother and referred to himself as a “dead terrorist son” and said he felt obligated to carry out the attack.

Maloney had rented a car on February 12 and left Albany around February 14, driving across the country to Boulder City, FBI Special Agent in Charge Christopher Delzotto said during the news conference.

A search of the rental vehicle also uncovered two shotguns, an AR-style pistol, numerous loaded AR magazines and shotgun shells, two devices described as flamethrowers containing thermite material, a crowbar, a hatchet and a cellphone currently undergoing forensic analysis, McMahill said.

Two search warrants were executed in Albany, Delzotto said. Electronics were also recovered from one residence and are being processed for evidence, while a second residence yielded several firearm components and a 3D printer.

An FBI spokesperson told CNN that bureau personnel in Nevada and New York were assisting the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department, which is the lead agency for the investigation.

How the suspected terrorism plot unfolded

The “critical incident” began late Thursday morning at a Los Angeles Department of Water and Power facility located near Boulder City, according to McMahill.

At approximately 10 a.m., Boulder City police dispatch received a 911 call reporting a vehicle had crashed through a secured gate at the power substation. The caller told dispatchers the driver appeared to be dead and gunshots had been heard after the crash, McMahill said.

When officers arrived, they observed a broken perimeter fence consistent with a vehicle being intentionally driven through it. Investigators also saw a debris field leading to a silver Nissan Sentra bearing New York license plates. The vehicle had come to rest against large industrial wire reels inside the facility.

As officers approached the car, they found the driver with what appeared to be a self-inflicted gunshot wound, according to McMahill.

Surveillance video shown during the news conference captured the vehicle approaching the facility before crashing through the gate and into the power infrastructure area.

There was no indication of major damage to the facility or any other critical infrastructure, and no service disruptions were reported as a result of the incident, Tim Shay, chief of the Boulder City Police Department, said during the news conference.

Attacks on the United States’ power grid have long been a focus of concern for law enforcement and intelligence agencies. Extremist chatter around targeting critical infrastructure notably increased in 2020, the same year a 14-page guide circulated among extremist communication channels detailing low-tech attacks, including assaults on power grids using firearms.

Intelligence reports have described the electric grid as an “attractive target” for such extremists, highlighting its vulnerability and symbolic significance, CNN previously reported.

When asked about a previous incident during the news conference, McMahill referenced a past incident near the Boulder City power substation facility, noting the ongoing need to address vulnerabilities at power plants.

“In this particular case, there are private security officers that are out there. There’s video, unlike we had in the previous incident. So there are things that they’ve done to target harden that,” he said. “We’ll continue to look at how we target harden those locations.”

CNN’s John Miller and Josh Campbell contributed to this report.

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