An examination of visuals, witness accounts and city planning documents reveals that security lapses in New Orleans left ...
Before Shamsud-Din Jabbar attacked Bourbon Street in New Orleans, the FBI says he researched the city, reading up on recent ...
The says that before driving into a crowd of New Year’s revelers in New Orleans, the man who carried out the deadly attack ...
The gap between the formal security plan on paper and the reality on the ground is raising questions about how fully engaged ...
Shock and grief have given way to finger-pointing over whether additional security could have stopped — or mitigated — the ...
Federal agents investigating the deadly attack say the perpetrator recorded himself riding through the French Quarter on a ...
The FBI looked into Jabbar’s internet search history and found he was looking into Bourbon Street balcony access, information ...
From June 2023 to December 2024, the suspect traveled to Cairo, Egypt; Ontario, Canada; and New Orleans, purchasing weapons and hiding explosives.
Louisiana Attorney General Liz Murrill plans to open a full review into the security planning that went into the Sugar Bowl and New Year's Eve, in the wake of a deadly attack.
The bollards on Bourbon Street were installed in 2017 following the 2016 terrorist truck attack in Nice, France, where a man ...
NEW ORLEANS − Anxious and ... street where you've walked." Like many French Quarter residents, Grose and neighbor Sherry Powell, 68, avoided Bourbon Street on New Year's Eve, ceding the narrow ...
A confidential report warned that bollards needed to be fixed. New Orleans didn't start to replace them for five years.