New Orleans hires former New York police czar amid investigations into
security after terror attack
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[January 09, 2025]
JACK BROOK and SARA CLINE
NEW ORLEANS (AP) — New Orleans Police Superintendent Anne Kirkpatrick
said she had hired former New York Police Commissioner William J.
Bratton as a consultant during a tense city council meeting Wednesday as
officials and residents sought answers over security lapses after a
terror attack that killed 14 people in the French Quarter.
Kirkpatrick also told councilmembers she won't step down.
“I will not resign,” Kirkpatrick said. “I believe I can be that person
to lead us forward.”
Kirkpatrick assumed a defensive stance as the city council prepares to
launch its own investigation into the street barrier systems within and
around Bourbon Street, where on New Year's Day an Islamic State
group-inspired attacker drove his F-150 truck around a police car
blockading the street and rampaged down the city's most famous
thoroughfare.
Bollards, protective columns designed to block vehicle traffic, had been
removed from the entrance of Bourbon Street because the city was in the
process of replacing them. However, the replacement barriers being
installed are not designed to stop a fast-moving truck, according to a
Nola.com report.
Mayor LaToya Cantrell has acknowledged she could not confirm if the new
bollard system is sufficient to stop a similar vehicle attack. And on
Monday, state Attorney General Liz Murrill ordered a review of security
measures that were in place for New Year’s celebrations and the Sugar
Bowl.
One group of law firms announced Wednesday that they have secured nearly
two dozen victims of the attack as clients and are conducting their own
investigation, stating that “officials were tragically aware and did not
protect the public.” One of the firms, Romanucci & Blandin, helped
George Floyd’s family secure a $27 million settlement against the city
of Minneapolis after he was killed by a police officer.
Unanswered questions and a new security consultant
Kirkpatrick has been praised for helping lead the city's troubled police
department to the brink of ending more than a decade of federal
oversight that was ordered after a history of mistreatment of African
Americans and corruption. She took over the department in late 2023.
She told the city council that she lacked clarity about the inventory
and condition of security systems around Bourbon Street. She had said
the day of the attack that the city did not deploy wedge barriers
because they “had malfunction problems" and that the attacker had
“defeated” the city's security plans.
She also told NBC last week that she hadn't known the city had portable
Archer barriers which could have been placed on sidewalks.
Bratton specializes in risk assessment and response with the New
York-based firm Teneo. Bratton's contract is being paid for by the
nonprofit New Orleans Police and Justice Foundation, Kirkpatrick said.
Bratton and the foundation did not respond to requests for comment
Wednesday.
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New Orleans Police Superintendent Anne Kirkpatrick, right, sits next
to Department of Public Works Director Rick Hathaway as they answer
questions from the city council Wednesday, Jan. 8, 2025, about the
New Year's Day French Quarter terror attack in New Orleans. (Chris
Granger/The Times-Picayune/The New Orleans Advocate via AP)
“There will be a time and a place for reflective review of our
actions -- that is not today,” Kirkpatrick said, noting she was
focused on her officers' wellbeing after many responded to the
traumatic incident.
Several councilmembers expressed concern over whether Bratton would
work closely with the city council and complained that they had not
been involved in his hiring. Councilmember J.P. Morrell urged the
police department to engage the public as it evaluates security
measures with Bratton.
“Right now, people are scared,” Morrell said.
Finger-pointing among officials
Council President Helena Moreno observed that representatives of the
city's Department of Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness
were absent from the meeting and “may have the answers that we’ve
been looking for.”
Collin Arnold, the department's director, told The Associated Press
he had not been invited to participate but would have done so if
asked. The councilmember chairing the meeting, Oliver Thomas, told
the AP that his staff had reached out to Arnold.
Arnold said his department helped install the retractable bollards
purchased by the city in 2017, though he said it became clear that
they were “not made for Bourbon Street.”
“The bollards would become clogged almost nightly with debris, and
then they could either not be opened or not be closed. It became a
real problem,” Arnold said.
He said his department was not involved in selecting or installing
the new bollards.
Councilmember Joe Giarrusso warned that finger-pointing would
persist “until we get a better handle on what governance looks like
and who is responsible” for Bourbon Street security measures.
An outraged public
Members of the public expressed their frustrations with city
officials at the meeting for failing to stop the attack from
happening, with some saying it was the outcome of the city's
longstanding failure to bolster its ailing infrastructure.
“The response (to the attack) was very well executed but the
preparedness was absolutely an atrocity,” said Nellie Catzen, who
leads a street improvement advocacy group.
Earl Hagans, a city resident, criticized officials for the lack of
answers.
“Who are we to rely on?” he said. “Who is supposed to know these
things?”
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