In the weeks leading up to this week’s stunning suicide bombing involving a Tesla Cybertruck outside the Trump International Hotel in Las Vegas, Matthew Livelsberger, a painted Special Forces man, sought treatment for depression. The 37-year-old, who apparently battled PTSD, grief from battle, and family concerns, had expressed a desire to seek additional support, according to his ex-girlfriend, Army caregiver Alicia Arritt.
” He wanted to get more enable”, said Arritt, 39, who published Livelsberger from 2018 to 2021. Being on active duty, the guilt and the stigma,” I think it was even harder for him,” according to the New York Post.
The last note
In his burned, charred cellphone, Livelsberger wrote,” I needed to wipe my head of the brothers I’ve lost and reduce myself of the problem of the lives I took.” On Friday, according to FBI leaders, Livelsberger “probably” had PTSD and had continued “family issues.”
Despite attending three mental health coaching sessions between August and December, it is still unclear whether he was assessed as a potential victim of murder or violence.
Combat accidents and personal problems
Arritt revealed that Livelsberger had suffered numerous concussions while in battle and had undergone again surgery as a result of injuries sustained from chute jumps, making pride of his almost 20 years in the military. However, he struggled with sleeping, focusing, and maintaining relationships.
Livelsberger left his Colorado household on December 26 after his wife, with whom he shared a infant daughter, left him over cheating allegations, according to sources. He then drove to Las Vegas by renting a Tesla Cybertruck using the Turo game. Before the blast, videos from the car’s cameras captured him pacingly removing dirt from the bumper while sporting a T-shirt with the Black Cat fireworks manufacturer logo on it.
The horrible event
Before launching the explosion on January 1, Livelsberger shot himself in the brain and sparked the explosion. Many people in the hotel’s attendant region sustained injuries from the blast.
Livelsberger was described as a male burdened by his military service by Arritt, who treated soldiers with brain injuries at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center. She recalled asking him about his wounds when they first met, to which he replied,” Just some concussion”.
Unconfirmed states and plot ideas
Prior to his death, Livelsberger had even sent emails about threats to national security. The man claimed that federal officers were working with China to build drones in an email that was made public on The Shawn Ryan Podcast, calling them” the most dangerous threat to national security.” Authorities are also verifying the senders validity.
No link to the attack in New Orleans
Federal officials ruled out any connection between Livelsberger’s bombing and another New Year’s Day attack in New Orleans. In that event, ISIS-affiliated ex-soldier Shamsud-Din Jabbar drove a vehicle into a Bourbon Street throng, killing 14 persons before being shot dead by authorities.
A soldier’s load
The lasting effects of conflict stress and the difficulties faced by veterans who struggle with mental health issues are highlighted in Livelsberger’s dreadful story. His ex-girlfriend reflected,” He was therefore glad of his company, but I think it came with a lot of grief. He carried a large load, and he wanted to make it right”.
The FBI continues to investigate the incident and Livelsberger’s last days.
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