"You're not going to forget about your kids," President Biden told Belal Badawi in their brief moment. "But you're going to be better. You're going to feel better. You're going to be stronger, it's a matter of time.
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,
Drew Dauphin, a 2023 Auburn University graduate who was killed at the New Year’s attack on Bourbon Street in New Orleans, was flown back to Montgomery on the evening of Jan. 10. Dauphin earned a bachelor’s degree in industrial and systems engineering and was a member of the Phi Delta Theta International Fraternity.
The body of an Alabama man killed in the recent New Orleans attackwas returned home Friday.Governor Kay Ivey said Alabama Law Enforcement Agency (ALEA) trooper
All as innocent as the University of Alabama freshman, and the 18-year-old woman intending to go to nursing school, and the 37-year-old father of two sons, and the 11 other victims struck down on Bourbon Street in the early-morning hours of New Year’s Day.
The suit, filed in Orleans Parish Civil District Court, was brought on behalf of victims Alexis Windham, Corian Evans, Jalen Lilly, Justin Brown, Shara Frison, Gregory Townsend and the family of Brandon Taylor.
Recordings attributed to Bourbon Street terrorist Shamsud-Din Jabbar, posted on SoundCloud a year before his deadly attack, reveal disturbing rhetoric about society, the dangers of music, and the end times.
At least 14 people were killed after a driver slammed into a crowd celebrating New Year's on Bourbon Street in New Orleans.
Memorial services and funerals for some of the 14 victims of the Jan. 1 terror attack on Bourbon Street continue this weekend. On Sunday (Jan. 12), 26-year-old Auburn University graduate Drew Dauphin will be laid to rest at the Alabama Heritage Funeral Home and Cemetery in Montgomery,
Gov. Kay Ivey Monday declared two days of mourning for two Alabamians killed in the New Year’s Day attack in New Orleans. In a proclation, the governor set Monday as a day of mourning for Kareem Badawi,
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.
The FBI’s investigation into Jabbar’s internet search history revealed he had researched balcony access over Bourbon Street, Mardi Gras, and shootings that happened in the city as late as mid-November.