People that are coming into New Orleans are going to be looking for security” in the aftermath of the New Year’s attack, the NFL’s Cathy Lanier says.
The NFL is enhancing security measures for the upcoming Super Bowl in New Orleans after a New Year's Day attack resulted in 14 fatalities. Security plans include increased law enforcement and intelligence coordination.
The 11th Super Bowl hosted by New Orleans next weekend is expected to draw an estimated 100,000 visitors to the city, according to Collin Arnold, director of the New Orleans Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness.
The NFL's security chief projected confidence in the league's safety plans as New Orleans prepares to host Super Bowl LIX on Feb. 9.
(Reuters) - A congressional delegation will visit New Orleans on Friday to inspect security ahead of the Feb. 9 Super Bowl following a New Year's Day attack in the city that killed 14 people and injured scores more, Axios reported.
More than a dozen people were killed after police said a man drove a truck through a crowd on Bourbon Street on New Year's Day.
The preparations for the big game have taken on an additional importance after the New Year’s Day attack on Bourbon Street.
Football fans attending the Super Bowl should expect to see increased security in New Orleans in the wake of the New Year’s Day Bourbon Street terrorist attack in which 14 people were killed, the NFL’s top security official said.
In the aftermath of the horrible terror attack in New Orleans on the day of the College Football Playoff, the NFL has had to re-examine their security protocols in and around the city for the Super Bowl 59.
The Jacksonville Jaguars hired former Green Bay Packers linebackers coach/run game coordinator Anthony Campanile as their new defensive coordinator.
Baltimore Ravens kicker Justin Tucker issued a statement Thursday, denying allegations made against him for alleged sexual misconduct while visiting several massage studios. The NFL plans to look into the matter.