Super Bowl security enhanced
The New Orleans Police Department met with French Quarter businesses on Wednesday to find out what they think about possible restrictions. A major one would be making Bourbon Street strictly walkable.
A University of Georgia student critically injured in the Jan. 1 New Orleans terrorist attack is one of 21 plaintiffs suing the city and its police department in new lawsuit.
Even before the tragic death of an 18-year-old Temple student this week, the New Orleans police department issued a warning to traveling Eagles fans ahead of the Super Bowl. Apparently the French Quarter poles are very old and they’ll topple over if you try to climb them.
Defunct and missing vehicle barriers were among the security gaps known to officials in New Orleans before the New Year's Day terrorist attack.
The New Orleans Police Department might want to rethink its approach to Super Bowl preparations because their message to Eagles fans feels like an open
The lawsuit recounted how victims had to crawl to safety as they struggled with life-threatening traumatic injuries.
Some people on Frenchmen Street, which has become a busy tourist destination, are asking if they'll see added security.
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
Fewer fans appeared to attend the postponed Sugar Bowl between Notre Dame and Georgia on Thursday in light of the terror attack in New Orleans. The Sugar Bowl was postponed as a result of the attack in the French Quarter on Wednesday morning.
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."
A news conference was held by Maples & Connick and Romanucci & Blandin announcing the civil lawsuit filed Wednesday in the Civil District Court for Orleans Parish.