Louisiana
They Populated Louisiana. Against Their Will.
Pancatelin’s plan synced completely with the huge aspirations of John Legislation, a louche Scotsman billed for a couple of quick years with reprising the shambolic French economic climate, which the late King Louis XIV’s battles had actually encumbered debilitating public debt. Legislation developed France’s initial financial organization, presented paper money as well as recommended marketing supply — “a brand-new sort of cash” — in his recently developed Business of the West, which had actually been approved a trading syndicate with French colonial Louisiana. He advertised the substantial region along the reduced Mississippi Valley as a land of possibility, with dirt with the ability of generating the finest cigarette, as well as mines of silver and gold. The business’s supply expanded, producing the globe’s initial over night millionaires, “lords as well as girls of Mississippi” bound in rubies as well as flush with money, as well as financial investment craze clutched entire fields of Parisian culture.
None of Legislation’s insurance claims became real. Even worse still, Louisiana was run “on the inexpensive,” its handful of negotiations in Biloxi, Mobile as well as New Orleans little bit greater than broken-down collections of huts. Farming, provided the absence of imported devices, failed; the homesteaders attempted expanding wheat, a staple of the French diet plan, however the Gulf Shore environment beat them, as well as starvation in those very early years was a continuous risk.
The monetary bubble around Louisiana would certainly quickly rupture. Yet while it lasted, Legislation aimed to make great on his guarantee to carry an additional 6,000 homesteaders to the area, as well as he discovered in Pancatelin a passionate partner. Throughout the summer season of 1719, a very first ship, Les Deux Frères, set out for the three-month going across to Louisiana, lugging 36 women detainees — chained, dressed in dustcloths as well as malnourished — in its hold. From that minute on, DeJean creates, “the quest was on to locate human freight” momentarily vessel, “the ship called La Mutine, or The Mutinous Female.”
Dealing with a disorderly as well as usually complicated historic document, DeJean traces the constellation of pressures — consisting of avarice, corruption as well as misogyny — that allowed the quick summary of an additional 96 approximately women detainees to be carried in the dank hold of La Mutine. The dreadful problems of the ladies’s trip, as well as the will to endure that need to have maintained them when they were put down, mostly without sources, in a barren, boggy, unwelcoming land, are stimulated in brilliant information.
Pancatelin had actually identified most of the ladies she allocated for expulsion as “ethically base” or “woman of the streets,” as well as succeeding chroniclers have actually mostly taken her word for it, however DeJean properly jabs openings in the unsteady lawful instances bordering their criminal activities. And also whatever their pasts, she stands up the ladies’s succeeding lives in early american Louisiana, where the majority of them struggled fairly along with their brand-new partners, where lots of got considerable home as well as repetitively acted as godmothers to each other’s kids, as evidence of their perseverance as well as upstanding personality. Their offspring on the Gulf Shore are myriad.
Louisiana
Louisiana AG to launch full review of New Orleans security plan after Bourbon Street attack: report
Louisiana’s top attorney plans to open a full review into the security planning that went into the Sugar Bowl and New Year’s Eve as concerns continue to mount about whether New Orleans officials could have done more to prevent the deadly attack on Bourbon Street that killed 14 people and injured dozens more, according to a report.
NOLA.com reported that Louisiana Attorney General Liz Murrill said she plans to make a formal announcement on Monday about the full review, noting that New Orleans Police Superintendent Anne Kirkpatrick has pledged to provide her complete support and cooperation.
New Orleans locals and visitors have been questioning why a temporary barrier intended to prevent cars from entering Bourbon Street, where Shamsud-Din Jabbar drove a truck through a New Year’s crowd in the early morning hours of Jan. 1, was set down instead of up, allowing vehicles to pass.
The temporary metal barriers were installed on Bourbon Street and other areas of the French Quarter in mid-November as the city was in the process of removing old bollards and replacing them with stainless steel bollards. That work was expected to continue through January.
NEW ORLEANS BARRICADE OVERSIGHT IN ‘TARGET AREA FOR TERRORISM’ DURING PRIME SEASON RAISES CONCERNS
Official recommendations for New Orleans’ security measures in the French Quarter, as part of a $2.3 billion infrastructure project that began in 2017, included the installation of new bollards on Bourbon Street to prevent mass casualty events that the FBI identified as a potential threat in the popular tourist area.
Security recommendations for the area included street cameras, a central command center, better lighting and high-quality bollards that are also used by the U.S. government near its official buildings.
NEW ORLEANS ATTACK: INVESTIGATION CONTINUES, AS FBI SAYS NO OTHER SUSPECTS INVOLVED
Former FBI official Bill Daly, a security and risk management adviser, told Fox News Digital that the “Achilles’ heel” in the Jan. 1 tragedy was that the temporary measures used on New Year’s Eve did not provide the same level of protection as was previously intended, designed and envisioned in the 2017 report.
“Temporary barricades are used extensively. They’re used, for instance, by the New York City Police Department in Times Square, to close off all the side streets leading to Times Square,” Daly said.
He explained that in New York City, authorities place cement blocks on the sidewalk and in the middle of the street as temporary barricades, and also use some vehicles like garbage trucks and dump trucks to block the road.
NEW ORLEANS TERROR SUSPECT’S BROTHER SAYS ATTACK IS SIGN OF ‘RADICALIZATION’: REPORT
Along with the investigation from Murrill, some city council members said they plan to conduct their own investigations into the security measures that were in place on the morning of the attack.
Murrill told NOLA.com she has spoken with City Council member Helena Moreno as well as District Attorney Jason Williams and other officials, adding that she intends to speak with others about her plans for a full review into security.
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“Everyone is committed to getting a complete picture of what was done or not done and, importantly, what needs to change so we can prevent this from ever happening again,” she said.
Murrill’s office did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment on the matter.
Fox News Digital’s Audrey Conklin, Garrett Tenney and Ashley Papa contributed to this report.
Louisiana
VIDEO: FBI shares footage showing New Orleans terrorist in French Quarter before deadly rampage • Louisiana Illuminator
NEW ORLEANS – The FBI has released video — some of it obtained from terrorist Shamsud-Bin Jabbar — that shows him in the French Quarter in the hours before he killed 14 people and injured dozens more, and his view as he rode a bicycle through the historic district exactly two months earlier.
The footage comes from French Quarter surveillance cameras and scenes Jabbar recorded on Meta glasses in October, during what the FBI said was the first of two trips he took to New Orleans before his early New Year’s Day massacre.
Authorities recovered three homemade bombs they said Jabbar placed in small coolers, including two that he’s seen on video placing on Bourbon Street. One of the explosive devices was found in the pickup truck he drove after he sped through a crowd of pedestrians and was killed in a shootout with police.
Also recovered from the truck was what the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms considers a remote detonation device. Jabbar, a 42-year-old IT professional and U.S. Army veteran from Texas, could have used it to set off the bombs had New Orleans police not responded soon enough, ATF Special Agent in Charge Joshua Jackson said during a news conference Sunday.
The FBI compiled all of the footage it shared into a single video that’s nearly four minutes long. The timestamps that follow detail the content of the segments:
0:00 – Jabbar recorded footage on Meta eyeglasses Oct. 31 during his bike ride in the French Quarter and Canal Street. The FBI said Jabbar was wearing Meta glasses early Wednesday, but there is no indication he used them to record or live stream his attack.
1:36 – Jabbar recorded himself wearing Meta glasses looking into a mirror at a home investigators say he rented during his October trip to New Orleans.
1:41 – French Quarter surveillance video recorded at 1:53 a.m. Wednesday shows Jabbar with a blue cooler that investigators said had an improvised bomb inside. The FBI said Jabbar left it at the intersection of Bourbon and St. Peter streets, and it was found a block away at Orleans Street after “multiple unknowing Bourbon Street visitors grabbed the cooler’s handle and moved it.”
2:20 – At approximately 2:20 a.m., surveillance footage shows Jabbar leaving the second explosive device inside a “bucket-style” cooler at Bourbon and Toulouse streets. The video shows him standing next to a trash can receptacle as visitors walk and dance around him.
At one point, Jabbar is seen waving his hand while looking down Bourbon Street, then he walks away from the cooler. Investigators did not address who or what Jabbar might have been waving to or why during Sunday’s news conference.
2:42 – A still image from surveillance video clearly shows Jabbar walking down Governor Nicholls Street. The FBI said he was returning to his truck to pick up the second cooler. The brown long coat he is seen wearing was recovered from the truck at the scene of the deadly attack.
3:00 – Jabbar is seen on surveillance video walking up and down Governor Nicholls Street.
Federal investigators provided an update on their continuing investigation Sunday, saying they still believe Jabbar acted alone. However, they continue to look into trips they say Jabbar took to Egypt and Canada over the summer. He also traveled to the Atlanta and Tampa, Florida, areas.
Lyonel Myrthil, the FBI’s special agent in charge of its New Orleans office, said investigators are trying to determine who Jabbar might have come into contact with during his travels.
Mayor LaToya Cantrell said she has asked the Biden administration to provide an expert who can assess the city’s terrorism vulnerabilities ahead of the Super Bowl, which takes place Feb. 9 at the Superdome, and Mardi Gras.
Carnival season officially begins Monday and culminates on Fat Tuesday, March 4.
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Louisiana
🔴 LIVE TORNADO CHASE – Significant Tornado Threat in Louisiana – January 5, 2025 {J}
The Texas Storm Chasers are actively monitoring and documenting severe weather events across East Texas, Louisiana, and Mississippi. Stay informed on their activities and receive timely updates on the latest weather warnings by following their journey. @JasonCooleyTSC 1/5/25
#storm #severe #weather #sky #hail #twister #wind #rain #flood #IRL #livetv #TEXAS
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