Around the corner on almost every major street in New Orleans, are barricades and law enforcement as agencies are working around the clock to make sure the city is secure ahead of the Super Bowl.
With bloodshed at its peak in the mid-1990s, Mayor Marc Morial enlisted a pair of NYPD strategists, Jack Maple and John ...
The following has been provided by Louisiana State Police: ...
Super Bowl LIX security will have 2,000 law enforcement officers on duty, along with 200 state troopers and 350 national ...
The head of NFL security, Gov. Jeff Landry, New Orleans Police Department Superintendent Anne Kirkpatrick and Louisiana State Police joined the news conference, expressing that the city is safe.
Multiple federal, state and local law enforcement agencies held a news conference in New Orleans Monday to stress their confidence in security ahead of the Super Bowl. Chief Security Officer for the ...
Gov. Jeff Landry in January named five new appointees to the Louisiana Board of Ethics. One of his new picks will serve as ...
Clay Fourrier's passion for media began as a child when his parents gave him his first camera. He knew from then on that he ...
People can expect to see more security in parts of New Orleans for the Super Bowl. Gov. Jeff Landry issued an executive order ...
At Louisiana State University--Baton Rouge, a public institution, all of the online education classes are recorded and archived so students can access the information on their time. The ...
They did not specify what that agenda is. Louisiana State Police, whose superintendent is a governor’s appointee, has not responded to the report. In an emailed response Friday, LSP ...
The DOJ found that Louisiana State Police (LSP) “engages in a pattern or practice of conduct that violates the Fourth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution.” The DOJ further noted that state ...