A rare snow storm blanketed the Houston area and across Southeast Texas, and this included areas along the Texas Coast, like the beach in Galveston. The same system also brought s
By noon, the National Weather Service had reported about 4 inches of snow in New Orleans. The storm prompted the first ever blizzard warnings for several coastal counties near the Texas-Louisiana border, and snow plows were at the ready in the Florida Panhandle, according to the Associated Press.
By the time Shamsud-Din Jabbar swerved onto Bourbon Street at 3:17 a.m. on New Year’s Day, his plan seemed to have been taking shape for months. But for those who narrowly escaped his deadly three-block rampage,
From a snowy Bourbon Street in New Orleans to making a snowman on the beaches in Houston, check out the falling snow in our southern states.
An examination of visuals, witness accounts and city planning documents reveals that security lapses in New Orleans left crucial gaps on Bourbon Street on New Year’s Day.
Days after a truck rammed through a Bourbon Street crowd, killing 14 and injuring nearly 60, portable vehicle-stopping barriers were deployed in New Orleans. Those same 700-pound mobile steel barriers will be used in Austin as well,
The FBI said an initial review of Shamsud-Din Jabbar, 42, showed that the man conducted extensive online research into New Orleans before the rampage.
After a truck drove into a crowd on New Year's in New Orleans, killing 14 people, the FBI has continued to look into the man Shamsud-Din Jabbar.
The man who is suspected of committing the New Years Day vehicle-ramming attack in New Orleans searched online for information about the Christmas market car-ramming attack in Germany, just hours before carrying out his own attack on Bourbon Street, according to the FBI.
AUSTIN, Texas - City officials talk about the changes to improve safety on 6th Street in downtown Austin. A news conference is being held at 10:30 a.m. (CT) at Parkside Austin in the 300 block of East 6th Street.
Shock and grief have given way to finger-pointing over whether additional security could have stopped — or mitigated — the recent attack that killed 14 people in New Orleans.
This week on Inside the Investigations, KXAN Investigator Matt Grant explains the groundswell of support for safety bollards across the country.