She announced the review after security experts said the new system has the lowest crash rating and is not designed to protect against terrorist attacks. Installation of the new bollards is timed to be complete ahead of Super Bowl LIX on Feb.
As New Orleans kicks off its extravagant Carnival season this week, Louisiana is launching a new investigation into the New Year’s Day massacre that killed 14 people while the city will get more federal resources to help prevent another horrific attack.
Following the New Year’s Day terror attack that killed 14 people and left dozens injured, Mayor LaToya Cantrell emphasized at Friday’s (Jan. 10) Super Bowl press conference that the city will be safe for the week-long event.
Cantrell said during an FBI press conference that a “tactical expert” will map out the city’s vulnerabilities and provide advice on how to secure them. The review will occur over the next week, she said,
The new measures will include a bollard system that was being installed at the time of the New Year's Day attack but is ... and federal agents. Mayor LaToya Cantrell speaks during a unified ...
after President Joe Biden’s administration promptly granted the city’s request for extra aid in the wake of the deadly Bourbon Street attack on New Year’s Day. Mayor LaToya Cantrell said ...
The man responsible for the deadly truck attack in New Orleans on New Year’s Day visited the city twice before and recorded video of the French Quarter with Meta smart glasses.
NEW ORLEANS (WVUE) - New Orleans Mayor LaToya Cantrell and ... 2024 Lee Zurik investigation. Cantrell’s request for a restraining order was filed the next day. Metropolitan Crime Commission ...
Devotional candles with photos of those killed during a New Year's Day terrorist attack in New Orleans sit ... Officials from Mayor LaToya Cantrell’s administration are set to answer questions Wednesday about the city’s security preparations during ...
President Biden and the first lady are in New Orleans on Monday to honor the victims of the New Year's Day attack, as the community there mourns the loss of at least 14 people.
The deadly New Year's Day attack was in the forefront of the city's offical Kings' Day event that begins the Carnival season.
New Orleans Mayor LaToya Cantrell speaks at a press conference at the temporary New Orleans Police Department headquarters about a suspected terrorist attack on Bourbon Street in the French Quarter Wednesday, Jan. 1, 2025. (Staff photo by Scott Threlkeld, The Times-Picayune)