Thursday's lawsuit touches off what could be a lengthy and costly period of litigation over the Bourbon Street attack.
The Louisiana Supreme Court ruled in favor of Gov. Jeff Landry, giving the state the right to clear homeless encampments without prior warning.
Seven victims of the New Year’s Day terror attack on Bourbon Street have filed a lawsuit against the City of New Orleans, ...
NOPD Superintendent Kirkpatrick appeared before the council but declined to answer any direct questions about the attack due ...
Officials said they are aware of videos circulating social media that claim to contain 911 recordings made during the attack.
The New Orleans City Council has approved a resolution to investigate the procurement, design, and implementation of street ...
Bourbon Street is once again crowded with locals and tourists, but this time it’s also adorned with crosses, candles, stuffed animals and flowers. Many Georgians traveled to New Orleans to watch ...
Fourteen people were killed in the New Year's Day attack on Bourbon Street. New Orleans city leaders were warned in a 2019 confidential physical security assessment that tourist-packed Bourbon ...
New Orleans Mayor LaToya Cantrell reopened Bourbon Street, just one day after a truck plowed into crowds on the busy tourist spot, killing 14. "The city of New Orleans, we're resilient," Cantrell ...
The New Year's Day vehicle attack that killed 14 people and injured more than 30 in the French Quarter of New Orleans has renewed focus on Bourbon Street security and how barriers called bollards ...
A 42-year-old Texas native swore allegiance to the ISIS terror group and plowed a pickup trip into a crowd of New Year's revelers on New Orleans' famous Bourbon ...
“We out here, standing up for our people out here on Bourbon Street. New Orleans, we gon’ bounce back and there’s nothing but love out here.” Master P has given back to the New Orleans ...