Executives from some of the nation's largest tech companies will be given the VIP treatment from Gov. Jeff Landry during the Super Bowl weekend, as he tries to attract business investment to New Orleans and Louisiana.
Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry said the state will establish checkpoints surrounding the French Quarter in New Orleans during Super Bowl week to enhance safety with the wounds of the deadly New Year's morning terrorist attack on Bourbon Street still fresh.
The governor’s order does not apply to the Superdome, where the NFL and the U.S. Department of Homeland Security are handling security precautions for the Super Bowl. Landry said state and city law enforcement officers will be working within their perimeters, however.
Gov. Jeff Landry will be talking about safety and security for the Super Bowl and Mardi Gras in New Orleans. Thousands of visitors are expected to fly into the New Orleans airport for the Mardi Gras season and the Feb.
Five days after taking office as Louisiana Governor, Jeff Landry signed a seven-page executive order titled, “Identifying, Quantifying and Mitigating the Adverse Effects of Illegal Immigration on Louisiana.
Robert Saleh was sacked by the New York Jets, and while all eyes are on the Aaron Glenn era, it's not over for the former head coach in the NFL. Over the past few days while the dust settled on the hirings of Glenn as coach and Darry Mougey as general manager in New York,…
Gov. Jeff Landry on Wednesday announced two enhanced security zones will be in effect around the French Quarter and Super Dome throughout Super Bowl weekend.
People traveling through parts of the French Quarter during Super Bowl week will be subject to bag checks when they pass through new security checkpoints, Gov. Jeff Landry said Wednesday. Why it matters: The move is a significant planning change for how the city operates during major events.
A tenured LSU professor was suspended amid an investigation into student complaints over inappropriate comments. He says the school violated his free speech and due process rights.
BATON ROUGE, La. – Sen. Bill Cassidy has emerged as a central figure in the confirmation of Robert F. Kennedy Jr., whose nomination to health and human services secretary poses an equally consequential moment for the second-term Republican facing an uncertain political future in Louisiana.
Heightened security restrictions will be in effect for the busiest section of the French Quarter starting next Wednesday through at least the day after Super Bowl LIX is played, Gov. Jeff Landry announced Wednesday.
The Super Bowl is just days away, and all eyes are on how federal, state and local officials plan to keep the city safe after a terror attack killed 14 people and injured 57 others on New Year's Day.