With crowds, live music and a makeshift memorial to the victims who died in the New Year’s attack, the New Orleans street was bustling again.
The city of New Orleans tried to protect its famed French Quarter from a terrorist attack years before a U.S. Army veteran ...
Shortly after reopening Bourbon Street, Sugar Bowl fans, locals, and musicians filled the street, not allowing fear to break their spirits.
City and state officials also pushed for a swift return to everyday life in defiance of terrorism fears. Law enforcement deployed additional assets to the French Quarter and Caesars Superdome, ...
When US Army Veteran Shamsud-Din Jabbar drove a truck around a makeshift barrier at the intersection of Canal and Bourbon Streets in the early morning hours, many questioned why the city’s more ...
“But we did observe Mardi Gras beads and other debris inside the ... 106 stainless steel bollards to New Orleans for its Bourbon Street project. He said the city requested part of the shipment ...
Malfunctioning bollards meant to protect Bourbon Street pedestrians were undergoing repairs, because of clogs caused by Mardi Gras beads, when a truck drove into a New Orleans crowd on New Year's ...