The New Orleans Saints and the NFL announced Saturday that they will donate $1 million to the victims of the New Year's Day truck ramming attack on Bourbon Street that killed 14 people and injured ...
The New Orleans ... Street in a white pickup truck, donned with an ISIS flag, at dangerous speeds. The French Quarter is less than two miles away from Caesars Superdome, where the Saints play ...
GAYLE BENSON AND THE NEW ORLEANS SAINTS ARE COLLABORATING WITH THE NFL TO DONATE $1 MILLION TO THE RELIEF EFFORTS TO HELP THE FAMILIES OF THOSE VICTIMS. BENSON SAYS OUR COMMUNITY HAS EXPERIENCED ...
The Las Vegas Raiders and New Orleans Saints play Sunday, Dec. 29, at the Saints' Caesars Superdome in a game on the NFL Week 17 schedule. Which team will win the NFL Week 17 game? Check out these ...
The New Orleans Saints and NFL plan to donate $1 million to the relief efforts for the victims of the New Year's Day attacks on Bourbon Street, Saints officials announced Saturday. Saints owner ...
In the wake of the devastating attack on one of America’s largest majority-Black cities ... The Quarter is nearly 90% white, while New Orleans as a whole is just 30% white.
CHICAGO (WLS) -- Many Notre Dame football fans traveled to New Orleans to see the Sugar Bowl ... dozens more were injured when a man drove a white truck through crowded Bourbon Street, which ...
As the New Orleans community continues to grieve those lost in the terrorist attack in the early hours of New Year’s Day, the Saints and Pelicans announced one of those killed was an employee of ...
College football fans have blasted ESPN for not showing the national anthem and moment of silence at the Sugar Bowl following the terror attack in New Orleans. New ...
New Orleans Police Superintendent Anne Kirkpatrick had a message she needed to send NFL fans in the wake of the truck attack that claimed 15 people and injured 30 others on New Year’s Day.
The NFL said it still believed fans would experience a safe Super Bowl. "We are deeply saddened by the news of the devastating incident in New Orleans," the NFL said in a statement on Wednesday.