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  • Barricades were supposed to keep Bourbon Street revelers safe. Here’s why they weren’t operational

    Barricades were supposed to keep Bourbon Street revelers safe. Here’s why they weren’t operational




    CNN
     — 

    The warning signs and safety concerns were obvious – to New Orleans residents, tourists and experts alike.

    Throngs of New Year’s Day revelers packed in the city’s bustling French Quarter had no strong barriers to protect them from speeding vehicles like the 6,000-pound truck that plowed into the crowd and killed 14 people.

    The tragedy came years after a private security consulting firm warned in a 2019 report that the risk of terrorism in the French Quarter – specifically mass shootings and vehicular attacks – remained “highly possible while moderately probable.”

    And just last month, the Department of Homeland Security and the FBI warned law enforcement of the threat of violence from lone offenders around the holidays and the potential use of vehicle ramming, according to two internal memos obtained by CNN.

    The 2019 report “strongly recommends” safety structures known as bollards –– vertical posts that can move up and down –– be fixed and improved “immediately.”

    But instead of sturdy bollards on New Year’s Eve, “They had the flimsy orange ones that you could just push over with your finger,” one witness said.

    In addition to the missing sturdy bollards, which were under repair, the city’s portable steel barriers were in the down position during New Year’s celebrations.

    New Orleans owns temporary barriers that could have blocked access to Bourbon Street – but decided not to use them, a source familiar with the report told CNN.

    New Orleans Police Superintendent Anne Kirkpatrick said she did not know the city owned the safety devices, known as Archer barriers.

    “I didn’t know about them, but we have them,” Kirkpatrick told reporters Thursday. “And so we have been able now to put them out.”

    Tourists walk past temporary barriers on Bourbon Street on January 2, one day after the attack.

    The New Orleans City Council is still trying to determine why Bourbon Street lacked permanent security bollards on the morning of the deadly attack, Councilmember Jean-Paul Morrell said Friday.

    “We have had some contradictory messages internally as far as when the work was awarded and when it should have started,” Morrell told CNN. “I know from my perspective as the incoming Council president, we are going to do our own deep-dive investigation over the coming weeks to go into that.”

    On New Year’s Eve, the city did park a police vehicle at the entrance to the street where more than a dozen revelers would be run over.

    “This particular terrorist drove around, onto the sidewalk, and got around the hard target,” the police superintendent said.

    “We did indeed have a plan,” Kirkpatrick said. “But the terrorist defeated it.”

    The barricades in question –– portable steel structures that can either lie flat or be raised depending on traffic –– seemed to stand out in the memories of several witnesses to the attack.

    Both longtime residents and tourists who spoke with CNN and affiliates noted those barriers were not raised while recounting the deadly truck-ramming in the hours that followed.

    Indeed, surveillance footage on Bourbon Street showed the pickup truck driving over one such barrier, which was not erect at the time of the incident, and speeding away after, narrowly missing partygoers.

    “Those barricades were not up, period,” Jimmy Cothran, a party’s designated driver told CNN’s Pamela Brown. “They had the flimsy orange ones that you could just push over with your finger. We actually thought it was kind of odd.”

    Jose Lieras, a tourist from Los Angeles, told CNN affiliate WDSU that the metal barricades at Bourbon and Canal Street were not raised –– instead, he saw “just the standard plastic ones.”

    Lieras added that though there were a lot of police stationed at Bourbon Street, cars were still driving by while pedestrians walked all over the street.

    “I don’t think they should let any vehicles at all. It should always be blocked off at nighttime because something like this could have happened.”

    Shortly before Bourbon Street reopened Thursday, the police chief said the city is “hardening the target” around the famous street so that “any penetration would be almost next to impossible.”

    That involved raising the existing barricades, bringing in heavier equipment and placing barriers that block sidewalk access, Kirkpatrick told CNN.

    The police chief said she is confident officers will be able to keep people safe, especially as New Orleans prepares to host the Super Bowl next month and the Mardi Gras carnival in March.

    A police officer blocks a street in the French Quarter on January 2.

    The DHS and FBI had warned of possible vehicle attacks over the holidays

    A joint DHS and FBI bulletin released December 6 and a follow up “critical incident note” about a vehicle attack on a German Christmas market came days before the massacre in New Orleans.

    Joint bulletins are distributed to federal, state, and local law enforcement from DHS, FBI, and National Counterterrorism Center to inform them about the threat environment. They are shared among law enforcement when necessary, and generally ahead of the holiday season.

    In the bulletin obtained by CNN, the federal agencies warned that “lone offenders pose most likely threat of violence to soft targets in the Homeland during winter holidays,” referring to individuals acting alone.

    “Lone offenders have historically used simple tactics, such as edged weapons, firearms, or vehicle ramming, due to their ease of access, ability to inflict mass casualties, and lack of required training,” the bulletin reads, listing other incidents in previous years.

    The bulletin said foreign terrorist organizations and online supporters “historically have disseminated holiday-themed media calling for violence against Western celebrations, prominent landmarks, and religious institutions.”

    “This year, FTOs began releasing winter holiday-related messaging earlier than in prior years, possibly foreshadowing an increase in FTO media production calling for violence during the winter holidays,” it said, referring to foreign terrorist organizations.

    After 84 people were killed in the 2016 vehicle attack in Nice, France, the city of New Orleans installed several steel mechanical barricades in the French Quarter in 2017 that could move in and out of position, according to NOLA.com.

    In addition to the mechanical barricades, police could also deploy portable wooden and steel barricades and use their vehicles to block roads at certain times.

    Michael Guillory, who works at a hotel near the scene of the New Year’s crime, told CNN affiliate WDSU he had “never” seen those steel barricades up in seven years.

    On Google Maps Streetview, images of Bourbon Street show that there are also bollard systems on the ground. But the bollards are in the process of being repaired, Morrell said Wednesday.

    The city has been working on installing new, removable stainless-steel bollards along several blocks, from Canal Street to St. Ann Street.

    Like the portable and mechanical barricades, the bollards could close the street to traffic when needed to protect pedestrians but be lowered when the street was open to vehicles.

    This illustration shows what new bollards on Bourbon Street will look like when an area between Canal and St. Ann streets are closed to vehicular traffic.
    This illustration shows what a stretch of Bourbon Street will look like when bollards are stored and the street is open to vehicles.

    Construction on that project began in November and was expected to carry on through February.

    In a city council meeting Monday, a Department of Public Works official mentioned construction crews had cleared equipment on Bourbon Street ahead of New Year’s celebrations after a councilmember mentioned local businesses being impacted by the construction.

    The bollards were the subject of a 2019 report from a private security consulting firm that noted the risk of terrorism in New Orleans’ French Quarter, specifically mass shootings and vehicular attacks, remained “highly possible while moderately probable.”

    The report by Interfor International, reviewed by CNN, “strongly recommends” bollard mobilization to be fixed and improved “immediately.”

    “The current bollard system on Bourbon Street does not appear to work,” the report said.

    But the current city council was not briefed on the report, Morrell said.

    “This new council came in, in 2022, so we were not aware that there was a 2019 report,” Morrell told CNN on Friday.

    Morrell said the barriers “were in the midst of being repaired and replaced” this week, and police vehicles were used to block parts of the area.

    But “in this instance, the individual circumvented the barriers by going on the sidewalk and getting past the area where they had police vehicles,” Morrell said.

    He continued, “So in this instance, even had the bollard barriers been up, the circumvention by riding on the sidewalk would have defeated them.”

    “This person was dead set on attacking our great community,” Lesli Harris, a Councilwoman for New Orleans’ District B said to CNN.

    “Whether or not it happened at that intersection or at another intersection along Bourbon Street, I think this person was aiming for New Orleans for whatever reason. And I don’t know that anything could have prevented this from happening.”

    Harris added that law enforcement was stationed at the intersection of the attack and responded immediately – taking the suspect down and killing him – preventing what she said could have been a much larger scale attack.

    “Bourbon Street itself is not a pedestrian area,” she said. “There are pedestrians, but there are also cross streets and there aren’t stations at every cross street to prevent this.”

    Other New Orleans officials acknowledge that existing protocols are weak and in transition.

    Council President Oliver Thomas has called a committee meeting for Monday to discuss the incident. An agenda states representatives from the police and public works department will be at the meeting.

    City officials saw next month’s Super Bowl as an opportunity to make needed infrastructure improvements including the bollards.

    “We’re going to fix it. It is going to be a top priority as we go into the Super Bowl and Mardi Gras, and the solution that we’re going to come up with is going to be a permanent one,” Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry said Wednesday.

    “If you believe there is a threat that warrants blocking off the street to vehicles but allows pedestrians, then you need to do it and resource it properly,” Rodger Shanahan, a Middle East analyst and author of “Islamic State in Australia,” told CNN on Friday.

    Shanahan added that stationing a single police vehicle at the top of the street was “obviously insufficient” and authorities should have deployed a variety of security protocols, like mechanical barricades on main routes and vehicles on minor routes.

    Ensuring a road like Bourbon Street is secure is a balancing act, CNN Senior Law Enforcement Analyst Charles Ramsey said Thursday. Blocking off the street could affect businesses that need deliveries or restrict people from leaving in case of an emergency.

    “It’s complicated … you have to make sure threats can’t get in, but you also have to make sure emergency responders can get out,” he said.

    “They’ve got to come up with a plan that really allows for some flexibility. You’ve got businesses there that need deliveries, it’s residential, you’ve got people that live in the area there. And so, to permanently shut it down is something that just doesn’t make a lot of sense, but at the same time you have to very mindful that this is a target.”

    By Thursday afternoon, officials had cleared Bourbon Street for reopening after raising the barricades and placing new archer barriers.

    This story has been updated with additional information.

    CORRECTION: An earlier version of this story gave the incorrect name of the firm that did the 2019 report on security risks in the French Quarter. It is Interfor International.



    Barricades were supposed to keep Bourbon Street revelers safe. Here’s why they weren’t operational

    During the festive season in New Orleans, Bourbon Street is known for its lively atmosphere and bustling crowds. To ensure the safety of revelers, barricades are typically set up to help control the flow of pedestrian traffic and prevent vehicles from entering the area. However, during a recent event, the barricades were not operational, leaving many wondering why.

    One of the main reasons cited for the barricades not being in place was a lack of coordination between city officials and event organizers. Due to miscommunication and oversight, the necessary permits and equipment needed to set up the barricades were not obtained in time for the event.

    Additionally, some reports suggest that budget constraints may have played a role in the lack of operational barricades. With limited funds available for public safety measures, the decision may have been made to forego setting up the barricades in order to allocate resources elsewhere.

    The absence of barricades left Bourbon Street vulnerable to potential security risks, as large crowds of people were free to roam without any barriers in place. This lack of crowd control could have potentially led to accidents or altercations among revelers.

    Moving forward, it is crucial for city officials and event organizers to work together to ensure that proper safety measures, such as operational barricades, are in place to protect both residents and visitors during events on Bourbon Street. By improving communication and planning, steps can be taken to prevent similar incidents from occurring in the future.

    Tags:

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    • New Orleans street safety
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    • Improving Bourbon Street security
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  • Thousands of revelers ring in 2025 in New Orleans’ French Quarter

    Thousands of revelers ring in 2025 in New Orleans’ French Quarter


    NEW ORLEANS (WVUE) – A golden-lit fleur de lis, a public concert stage and the familiar excesses along Bourbon Street were the focus of thousands of New Orleans visitors late Tuesday (Dec. 31).

    New Year’s Eve revelers awaited the final countdown to 2025 in the French Quarter with a chilly night of music, laughter, beverages and fireworks along the curve of the Mississippi River.

    Tank and the Bangas and local brass band favorite Bonerama played the free concert that ended 2024 and ushered in the new year. The last 10 seconds were to be counted down as the fleur de lis glowing at the Jax Brewery building was lowered across from Jackson Square.

    Tourism officials said hotel occupancy rates were high in the city, both for the holiday and from an influx of college football fans in town for Wednesday’s Allstate Sugar Bowl between the University of Georgia and Notre Dame University.

    Many of those football fans lined the streets of the French Quarter earlier Tuesday, reaching for throws from riders in the annual Sugar Bowl Parade that rolled at 2 p.m.

    The Sugar Bowl is scheduled to kick off Wednesday at 7:45 p.m. at Caesars Superdome.

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    Last night, thousands of revelers gathered in New Orleans’ iconic French Quarter to ring in the new year of 2025. The streets were alive with music, laughter, and fireworks as locals and tourists alike came together to celebrate the start of a new year.

    The party started early in the evening, with bars and restaurants filling up quickly as people prepared to say goodbye to 2024 and welcome in 2025. As midnight approached, the energy in the French Quarter only grew stronger, with the sounds of live music and cheering filling the air.

    When the clock struck midnight, the sky lit up with a dazzling display of fireworks, painting the night sky in brilliant colors and marking the official start of the new year. Revelers hugged, kissed, and raised their glasses to toast to a year filled with hope, happiness, and new beginnings.

    As the night continued, the celebration in the French Quarter showed no signs of slowing down. The streets were filled with people dancing, singing, and enjoying the festive atmosphere that only New Orleans can provide.

    As we look ahead to the rest of 2025, let’s carry the spirit of last night’s celebration with us – a spirit of joy, unity, and optimism for the future. Happy New Year from the French Quarter!

    Tags:

    New Orleans, French Quarter, 2025, New Year’s Eve, celebration, revelers, party, ringing in the new year, Louisiana, tourism, festivities, cultural event, music, fireworks, street party, tradition

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  • Times Square revelers could face hours of soggy wait for 2025 as America celebrates the new year

    Times Square revelers could face hours of soggy wait for 2025 as America celebrates the new year


    Many Americans will ring in the New Year with umbrellas and ponchos as a rain event is expected to drench much of the East and Northwest coasts.

    A look from the FOX Forecast Center shows a storm system moving into the Interstate 95 corridor in the Northeast and mid-Atlantic regions Tuesday night and into Wednesday morning.

    This means that major cities, such as New York City, Philadelphia and Washington, D.C., will likely see rainy weather as the clock approaches midnight.

    For the million or so people who will pack Times Square for the traditional ball drop to ring in 2025, plan on rain at times with temperatures in the 40s.

    Temperatures will be chilly for most in the Northern Plains and Upper Midwest, where a storm system might produce snow. So those who may have missed out on a white Christmas could see some powder on New Year’s Eve.

    The Pacific Northwest will also see precipitation on New Year’s Eve as a parade of atmospheric river-type storms continues. Expect periods of rain in the lowlands and more snow in the mountains.

    2025 New Year's Eve Numerals Arrive In Times Square

    The 2025 New Year’s Eve numerals are lit up in Times Square on December 18, 2024 in New York City.

    In contrast, dry conditions will be found in the Southwest, Southern Plains and the Deep South, along with Alaska and Hawaii.

    How To Watch Fox Weather

    To know how the weather could impact your New Year’s plans, be sure to download the free FOX Weather app on your phone.

    Original article source: Times Square revelers could face hours of soggy wait for 2025 as America celebrates the new year



    As America prepares to ring in the new year of 2025, Times Square revelers may be in for a damp and chilly wait as they gather to watch the iconic ball drop. With forecasts predicting rain showers and possibly even a wintry mix, those braving the crowds in New York City could be facing hours of soggy conditions.

    Despite the less-than-ideal weather, the excitement and energy of the annual celebration are sure to keep spirits high as partygoers count down to midnight. From live music performances to dazzling fireworks displays, Times Square is the place to be for an unforgettable New Year’s Eve experience.

    So grab your umbrella and bundle up, because the countdown to 2025 is on – rain or shine!

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