Warning: The video above is graphic in nature. Viewer discretion is advised. The New Orleans Police Department released body camera footage on Friday of a shooting that happened during a terrorist attack on New Year's Day on Bourbon Street.
The gap between the formal security plan on paper and the reality on the ground is raising questions about how fully engaged city officials were in formulating, vetting and executing their agreed upon playbook for one of the busiest nights of the year in the French Quarter.
Police Superintendent Anne Kirkpatrick also identified the officers who fired on the attacker, calling them “national heroes.”
The Orleans Parish District Attorney Jason Williams is honoring members of the New Orleans Police Department involved in the New Year’s Day terror attack.
Teens arrested in New Year’s Day murder
Chaotic bodycam video shows Shamsud-Din Jabbar shoot at police from behind an airbag at close range, and the flash of the muzzle is visible.
During Saturday's AFC Wild Card game between the Houston Texans and the Los Angeles Chargers, three New Orleans Police Department officers who stopped the Bourbon Street terror suspect, Shamsud-Din Jabbar,
New Orleans Police on Friday released body-camera footage, showing the moment they exchanged gunfire with the man behind the New Year's Day attack. The video captures Shamsud-Din Jabbar after he had crashed his white pick-up truck and started to fire at police. Police returned fire and Jabbar was declared dead at the scene.
Superintendent Anne Kirkpatrick wearing her police badge “upside down” is part of a longstanding department tradition that underlines her leadership role, not a nod to diversity initiatives or pro-Islamic sentiments,
An attacker inspired by the Islamic State fired at police during a New Orleans incident, leading to his fatal shooting by officers.
Interview with officers who stopped New Year's Day terrorist (Courtesy: New Orleans Police Department) Saving more, paying down debt and building wealth are top financial goals for many Americans. CNBC's Senior Personal Finance Correspondent Sharon Epperson and Anchor Kelly Evans share advice on how to do a financial reset to meet those goals.
The New Orleans Police Department has released an interview with the officers who stopped the terrorist who perpetrated the New Year’s Day Bourbon Street Attack.