NEW ORLEANS — In the wake of the Bourbon Street attack, New Orleans Police Superintendent Anne Kirkpatrick says she has no plans to give in to calls for her resignation from national media.
NEW ORLEANS (AP) — The New Orleans Police Department can begin ending its longstanding federal oversight, a judge ruled Tuesday in response to a request from the city and the Justice Department to wind down monitoring.
New Orleans Police Superintendent Anne Kirkpatrick says she has hired former New York Police Commissioner William J. Bratton as a consultant to assess and help improve the city’s security after a terror attack that killed 14 people on New Year’s Day in the French Quarter.
The bollards on Bourbon Street were installed in 2017 following the 2016 terrorist truck attack in Nice, France, where a man claiming to be part of the Islamic State killed 86 people and injured over 400 by driving a large truck through a pedestrian mall.
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