Louisiana officials say communication and staffing efficiency could have been improved in response to the New Year's Day terror attack in which a man plowed down Bourbon Street in a pickup truck, killing 14 and injuring dozens of others.
Officials say the lessons learned from the attack will help improve security measures and emergency response coordination for future incidents.
Footage from EarthCam shows snowfall blanketing Bourbon Street in New Orleans, Louisiana, as a once-in-a-generation winter storm hits the South.
Yet another lawsuit has been filed in regard to the Bourbon Street terror attack. “We can’t keep being asked to be resilient and to put our tr
Today, January 21, 2025, a winter storm barreled through the southern United States, depositing snow in cities like Houston and New Orleans. According to the Associated Press, snow plows were at the ready in a particularly surprising locale—the Florida panhandle.
Twenty-one victims of the New Orleans terror attack have filed a lawsuit against city officials and contractors this week, saying that they failed to protect Bourbon Street revelers from a “preventabl
The added security measures throughout the French Quarter are a stark reminder of the recent violence while preparing the city for Super Bowl week and Mardi Gras. “It’s just o
A cohort of 21 survivors and relatives of victims killed in the New Year’s Day truck attack is suing city officials, accusing them of failing to take the appropriate safety precautions before the incident, despite knowing the French Quarter was vulnerable to an attack for nearly a decade.
The Super Bowl is just days away, and all eyes are on how federal, state and local officials plan to keep the city safe after a terror attack killed 14 people and injured 57 others on New Year's Day.
Two Fort Myers teens are among the plaintiffs in a lawsuit against New Orleans officials, claiming the deadly New Year's attack was "predictable and entirely preventable."
The Super Bowl is just days away, and all eyes are on how officials plan to keep New Orleans safe after a terror attack killed 14 people and injured 57 others there on New Year's Day. Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry held a news conference Wednesday where he announced strict security changes for certain areas in New Orleans ahead of the game.